This article analyses the role of the sovereignty principle for the oil industry and the implication this relationship has for development in Africa. It also looks at the transnational social movements around the exploitation of natural resources, comparing Equatorial Guinea and Western Sahara. The main hypothesis is that international norms of self‐determination and those developed for non‐autonomous people in Western Sahara, allow us to raise questions and to make demands over mineral resources in a very different way than where sovereignty is not in question, as in Equatorial Guine
West Africa piracy is the most profitable in the world. Well-organized gangs steal refined oil in co...
Empirical tests of the “resource curse” thesis have provided inconclusive evidence for the claim tha...
This article explores the curse of natural resources in Africa and the lessons that richly endowed c...
Recent economic and socio-political dynamics in the territories that form Equatorial Guinea are rela...
Phosphate, fish and possibly oil and gas all constitute important natural resources found on the ter...
Phosphate, fish and possibly oil and gas all constitute important natural resources found on the ter...
In less than a decade, Equatorial Guinea has transformed itself from an African backwater into one o...
Starting from the juxtaposition of Equatorial Guinea’s luxurious private oil compounds with the spor...
Since the mid-1970s, the Western Saharan conflict has defied 60th resolution and understanding, as a...
Abstract In contemporary studies of Africa the Westphalian style ‘sovereign state’ is often uti...
Rich in resources and small in population, Western Sahara, partially occupied since 1975 by neighbou...
The new rush to discover and exploit hydrocarbon resources in West Africa, and particularly in the G...
Strategically located in the highly coveted Gulf of Guinea, Nigeria is Africa’s largest oil-produci...
This article, while critically examining the second wave of the scramble for oil and mineral resourc...
This study examines how the uneven application of regulatory standards in oil exploration and extrac...
West Africa piracy is the most profitable in the world. Well-organized gangs steal refined oil in co...
Empirical tests of the “resource curse” thesis have provided inconclusive evidence for the claim tha...
This article explores the curse of natural resources in Africa and the lessons that richly endowed c...
Recent economic and socio-political dynamics in the territories that form Equatorial Guinea are rela...
Phosphate, fish and possibly oil and gas all constitute important natural resources found on the ter...
Phosphate, fish and possibly oil and gas all constitute important natural resources found on the ter...
In less than a decade, Equatorial Guinea has transformed itself from an African backwater into one o...
Starting from the juxtaposition of Equatorial Guinea’s luxurious private oil compounds with the spor...
Since the mid-1970s, the Western Saharan conflict has defied 60th resolution and understanding, as a...
Abstract In contemporary studies of Africa the Westphalian style ‘sovereign state’ is often uti...
Rich in resources and small in population, Western Sahara, partially occupied since 1975 by neighbou...
The new rush to discover and exploit hydrocarbon resources in West Africa, and particularly in the G...
Strategically located in the highly coveted Gulf of Guinea, Nigeria is Africa’s largest oil-produci...
This article, while critically examining the second wave of the scramble for oil and mineral resourc...
This study examines how the uneven application of regulatory standards in oil exploration and extrac...
West Africa piracy is the most profitable in the world. Well-organized gangs steal refined oil in co...
Empirical tests of the “resource curse” thesis have provided inconclusive evidence for the claim tha...
This article explores the curse of natural resources in Africa and the lessons that richly endowed c...