Responding to the commodity boom with varieties of resource nationalism: a political economy explanation for the different routes taken by Africa's new oil producers
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The Extractive Industries and Society
Abstract
The institutional responses of Africa's new producers to the early 21st century commodity boom differed both
between and within countries over time. Despite making similarly sized discoveries in the mid-2000s, Ghana and
Uganda took different routes, with Ghana oscillating between a neoliberal modality and a soft version of re source nationalism (depending on which party was in power), whilst Uganda adopted a more consistent and
robust resource nationalist position. Current explanations for varieties of resource governance tend to focus on
either institutions or ideas. We argue for an alternative theoretical perspective that locates the entwined role of
both institutions and ideas within a deeper analysis of a country's ‘political settlement’. This offers a more
compelling explanation for the varied responses to the commodity boom in sub-Saharan Africa, and suggests that
different types of political settlements have had significant implications for how oil governance has progressed in
different contexts.
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Research Article