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Juxtaposing literatures on urbanisation and mining at a time when
small-scale artisanal as well as large-scale mining operations are
transforming many African economies, this book focuses on the
interplay of Sub-Saharan Africa mining and urbanisation in the
context of global shifts in capital and labour flows. Classically,
urbanisation has been identified with industrial expansion, but
mining is a distinct subset of industrial activity, involving
artisanal and large-scale mining. Case studies of a wide variety of
countries with long historical experience of large-scale mining
(South Africa, Ghana, Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, Zambia
and Botswana), as opposed to more recent experiences of artisanal
mining (Mozambique, Tanzania, and Sierra Leone), reveal that the
mining surge in some countries and the slow-down in others where
mining was formerly dominant encompasses a wide range of urban
outcomes. In view of the cyclical boom-and-bust nature of mining
activity and the sector's dependence upon finite resources and
exposure to world market fluctuations, this book probes settlement
patterns and welfare dimensions of urban change associated with
African mining amidst an unprecedented spiral in global mineral
prices. This book was published as a special issue of the Journal
of Contemporary African Studies.
Juxtaposing literatures on urbanisation and mining at a time when
small-scale artisanal as well as large-scale mining operations are
transforming many African economies, this book focuses on the
interplay of Sub-Saharan Africa mining and urbanisation in the
context of global shifts in capital and labour flows. Classically,
urbanisation has been identified with industrial expansion, but
mining is a distinct subset of industrial activity, involving
artisanal and large-scale mining. Case studies of a wide variety of
countries with long historical experience of large-scale mining
(South Africa, Ghana, Angola, Democratic Republic of Congo, Zambia
and Botswana), as opposed to more recent experiences of artisanal
mining (Mozambique, Tanzania, and Sierra Leone), reveal that the
mining surge in some countries and the slow-down in others where
mining was formerly dominant encompasses a wide range of urban
outcomes. In view of the cyclical boom-and-bust nature of mining
activity and the sector's dependence upon finite resources and
exposure to world market fluctuations, this book probes settlement
patterns and welfare dimensions of urban change associated with
African mining amidst an unprecedented spiral in global mineral
prices. This book was published as a special issue of the Journal
of Contemporary African Studies.
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