Mineralized Urbanization In Africa In The Twenty-First Century: Becoming Urban Through Mining Extraction
Date
2022
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
International Journal Of Urban And Regional Research
Abstract
This article focuses on the urbanizing impact of the post-millennial mineral boom
at artisanal and small-scale (ASM) or large-scale (LSM) mining sites in three mineral-rich countries, involving gold in Ghana, diamonds in Angola, and both minerals in
Tanzania. The focus is on comparing the agency of miners and other residents migrating to
settling in and making the mining site habitable. Their mobility and settlement patterns
reveal an urbanization trend marked by population agglomeration and expansion. labour
complexity, taking distinct forms at the rush and mature stages of gold and diamond ASM
and LSM sites. Citing data from household surveys conducted at 12 mining sites, we trace
how ‘mineralized urbanization’ propels in-migration, rising localized purchasing power,
and proliferating service sector and trade activities, fueling both urban demographic
and economic change along the mining extraction trajectory. LSM and ASM generate
synergies as well as detractive forces, depending on the size, age and history of the mining
settlement development. What emerges is the differential development of households
and settlements through strategic economic manoeuvring and the rough and tumble of
happenstance, underlined by a compelling, albeit fluctuating, trajectory of non-renewable
mineralized urbanization
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Africa, mineral, urbanization