Attempts to address the resource curse remain focussed on revenue management, seeking technical solutions to political problems over examinations of relations of power. In this paper, we provide a review of the contribution anthropological research has made over the past decade to understanding the dynamic interplay of social relations, economic interests and struggles over power at stake in the political economy of extraction. In doing so, we show how the constellation of subaltern and elite agency at work within processes of resource extraction is vital in order to confront the complexities, incompatibilities, and inequities in the exploitation of mineral resources
The resource curse literature has necessarily evolved in a rather fragmented way. While economists, ...
The natural resource curse thesis is that the blessing/windfall of "nature's gifts" tends to be a c...
This paper presents a critical survey of the literature on the ‘resource curse’, focusing on three m...
This book offers an overview of the key debates in the burgeoning anthropological literature on res...
In the recent decades, anthropological studies to understanding the multiple social, political, econ...
The idea that the scope of anthropology in the face of the new development economics be widened is a...
Anthropologists have been studying the relationship between mining and the local forms of community ...
In global debates about natural resource extraction, affect has played an increasingly prominent, if...
In global debates about natural resource extraction, affect has played an increasingly prominent, if...
The continent of Africa is one of economic paradox: Abundant natural resources lie within many of th...
The continent of Africa is one of economic paradox: Abundant natural resources lie within many of th...
markdownabstractThe resource curse literature has necessarily evolved in a rather fragmented way. Wh...
The notion of the ‘resource curse’ suggests that large inflows of extractive industry revenues cause...
As a concept and policy lesson, the “resource curse” idea gained popularity in the late 1980s and ea...
There has been increasing interest in the so-called ‘resource curse’, that is the tendency of resour...
The resource curse literature has necessarily evolved in a rather fragmented way. While economists, ...
The natural resource curse thesis is that the blessing/windfall of "nature's gifts" tends to be a c...
This paper presents a critical survey of the literature on the ‘resource curse’, focusing on three m...
This book offers an overview of the key debates in the burgeoning anthropological literature on res...
In the recent decades, anthropological studies to understanding the multiple social, political, econ...
The idea that the scope of anthropology in the face of the new development economics be widened is a...
Anthropologists have been studying the relationship between mining and the local forms of community ...
In global debates about natural resource extraction, affect has played an increasingly prominent, if...
In global debates about natural resource extraction, affect has played an increasingly prominent, if...
The continent of Africa is one of economic paradox: Abundant natural resources lie within many of th...
The continent of Africa is one of economic paradox: Abundant natural resources lie within many of th...
markdownabstractThe resource curse literature has necessarily evolved in a rather fragmented way. Wh...
The notion of the ‘resource curse’ suggests that large inflows of extractive industry revenues cause...
As a concept and policy lesson, the “resource curse” idea gained popularity in the late 1980s and ea...
There has been increasing interest in the so-called ‘resource curse’, that is the tendency of resour...
The resource curse literature has necessarily evolved in a rather fragmented way. While economists, ...
The natural resource curse thesis is that the blessing/windfall of "nature's gifts" tends to be a c...
This paper presents a critical survey of the literature on the ‘resource curse’, focusing on three m...