Eco-Justice And Human Well-Being In Ghana’s Artisanal Mining Communities: Towards A Theological Ethic Of Sustainable Community
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Local Environment
Abstract
The negative effects of Ghana’s artisanal mining industry on the
sustainability of the natural environment and community life, exemplifies
the dilemma of the protracted relationship between the quest for human
well-being and sustainability of communities. Nevertheless, sustainable
communities are crucial if the flourishing of the natural environment and
engendering of human well-being would be attained. Indeed, within the
indigenous African community, one is not pursued without the other, for
both occur in tandem to ensure the sustainability and well-being of
community. Drawing on secondary sources on artisanal mining and its
drivers—human livelihoods and wellbeing—as against their social and
environmental effects, this article sets out to offer an eco-justice analysis
of the relationship between the quest for human wellbeing through
artisanal mining and sustainable communities towards a constructive
eco-justice theological ethics of sustainable community for Christian
ecological praxis in the context of artisanal mining.
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Research Article