This paper aims at analyzing the work activities carried out by children in artisanal and small-scale mining in Katanga, DRC, in the wake of the evolution of representations of work, masculinity, family and childhood since the reforms of the Congolese mining sector promoted by the institutions of Bretton Woods. Katanga has been the industrial flagship of the Belgian Congo organized around the mining town of Lubumbashi during the colonial period and also after the independence of the country. The “union minière du Haut-Katanga” created by Belgians and nationalized after with the name of “Gécamines” has had a decisive impact on the structuration of the collective imagination on work, masculinity, family and childhood in this area of the count...