This article traces the geography of the “conflict minerals” campaign and its impact on artisanal mining in the eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo, a region that currently emerges as a pioneer case of traceability and due diligence efforts with regard to the exploitation and trade in tantalum, tungsten and tin. We subsequently analyse the opening and attempted closure of the Congolese resource frontier in the context of recent market reform, and we describe how this process has accompanied a transnational corporate–government nexus bent on monopolising Congo’s artisanal 3 T resources. Specifically, we argue how the conflict minerals campaign and its implementation “on the ground” has brought about a harmful, disruptive logic for an ar...
Since the early 2010s, a wide range of conflict-mineral policy reforms have been implemented in the ...
There exists a widespread assumption that many of the belligerent parties in eastern DRC finance par...
Existing research suggests a strong link between mining and local conflict but makes no distinction ...
This article traces the geography of the “conflict minerals” campaign and its impact on artisanal mi...
This article traces the geography of the “conflict minerals” campaign and its impact on artisanal mi...
For the last two decades, the Congolese Artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) sector has been under...
This essay addresses the current dynamics governing access to artisanal mineral markets in eastern C...
In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the mining sector has the potential to play a pivotal rol...
Numerous initiatives are currently trying to reform eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (DRC)...
This article offers ethnographic insights into how reforms of artisanal mining have triggered confli...
Numerous initiatives are currently trying to reform eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (DRC)...
The artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) sector in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (D...
Civil wars inflict considerable costs on countries which may be trapped in vicious cycles of violenc...
The main purpose of this case study was to explain the power game behind the mineral extraction and ...
The artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) sector in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (D...
Since the early 2010s, a wide range of conflict-mineral policy reforms have been implemented in the ...
There exists a widespread assumption that many of the belligerent parties in eastern DRC finance par...
Existing research suggests a strong link between mining and local conflict but makes no distinction ...
This article traces the geography of the “conflict minerals” campaign and its impact on artisanal mi...
This article traces the geography of the “conflict minerals” campaign and its impact on artisanal mi...
For the last two decades, the Congolese Artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) sector has been under...
This essay addresses the current dynamics governing access to artisanal mineral markets in eastern C...
In the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), the mining sector has the potential to play a pivotal rol...
Numerous initiatives are currently trying to reform eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (DRC)...
This article offers ethnographic insights into how reforms of artisanal mining have triggered confli...
Numerous initiatives are currently trying to reform eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo’s (DRC)...
The artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) sector in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (D...
Civil wars inflict considerable costs on countries which may be trapped in vicious cycles of violenc...
The main purpose of this case study was to explain the power game behind the mineral extraction and ...
The artisanal and small-scale mining (ASM) sector in the Eastern Democratic Republic of the Congo (D...
Since the early 2010s, a wide range of conflict-mineral policy reforms have been implemented in the ...
There exists a widespread assumption that many of the belligerent parties in eastern DRC finance par...
Existing research suggests a strong link between mining and local conflict but makes no distinction ...