4.7 Article

Beyond the rituals of inclusion: The environment for women and resource governance in Africa's artisanal and small-scale mining sector

Journal

ENVIRONMENTAL SCIENCE & POLICY
Volume 116, Issue -, Pages 30-37

Publisher

ELSEVIER SCI LTD
DOI: 10.1016/j.envsci.2020.10.019

Keywords

Artisanal and small-scale mining; Feminist political economy; SDGs; Minamata convention on mercury; Women's empowerment

Funding

  1. Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada [435-2014-1630]
  2. Office of the Provost, Discovery Centre, Carleton University

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This paper explores the gendered meanings about gold artisanal and small-scale mining (ASGM) and the environment resulting from the intersection or lack thereof of formal policy commitments to ASGM, environmental protection, and women's inclusion. It examines three contexts where environmental narratives have been framed and mobilized, including the 2014 Minamata Convention on Mercury, as well as case studies on the impact of gender-blind environmental initiatives on women artisanal gold miners in central Mozambique and eastern Ghana. The paper concludes with three recommendations for future work on the intersection of environmental protection programs and women's empowerment agendas in the ASGM sector.
This paper considers the apparent confluence of three policy developments: the Sustainable Development Goals, as the latest international commitment to gender equality and women's empowerment; the growing push to formalize the artisanal and small-scale mining sector; and the call to address environmental concerns of ASM through increased regulation, including formalization. Informed by feminist political economy and political ecology scholarship, we consider the kinds of gendered meanings about gold ASM (ASGM) and the environment made possible through the points where formal policy commitments to ASGM, environmental protection and women's inclusion intersect, or fail to intersect. We explore three contexts in which environment narratives have been framed and/or mobilized: the 2014 Minamata Convention on Mercury, followed by two brief case studies examining the consequences of the enforcement of gender-blind environmental initiatives on the livelihoods of women artisanal gold miners in central Mozambique and eastern Ghana. The paper concludes with three recommendations for future work on the intersection of environmental protection programs and women's empowerment agendas for the ASGM sector.

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