Youth and Women Participation in Extractive Industries: A Cooperatives Approach to Artisanal and Small-scale Mining (ASM)

IF 0.3 Q4 POLITICAL SCIENCE
M. Shangase
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Abstract

Small scale mining largely remains an informal and unexplored economic sector. Mining is generally dominated by big players in the form of multinational corporations (MNCs) who are characterised by large scale for profit production at the expense of smaller players. In particular, the participation of youth and women in extractive industries is usually restricted to either illegal or small-scale mining. Whilst artisanal and smallscale mining (ASM) is promising and has a potential in terms of employment creation and enterprise development, this sector remains at the periphery of options and is deemed the sector of last resort for most youth and women. The sector is marked by lack of government regulation and neglect with regards to issues of safety, health and environmental protection. Observations from across the African continent and the rest of the developing world indicate that ASM is a formidable source of employment and economic development for poor communities. It could therefore be argued that for youth and women on the continent ASM proffers opportunities and thus needs to be formalised and promoted as a viable option for economic participation especially within poor communities. Using secondary data sources, this paper foregrounds the cooperatives approach, as championed across sectors in South Africa, as a tried and tested model that could be replicated across the Southern African Development Community (SADC) region to complement existing policy instruments such as the SADC mining protocol and the African Union (AU) Mining Vision. This paper contends that cooperatives offer a low entrance barrier type of formalisation of ASM initiatives for youth and women whereby legal entities within the extractive industries could be established.
青年和妇女参与采掘业:手工和小规模采矿的合作社方法
小规模采矿在很大程度上仍然是一个非正式和未开发的经济部门。采矿业通常由以跨国公司(MNCs)形式出现的大型企业主导,这些企业的特点是以牺牲小型企业为代价进行大规模的利润生产。特别是,青年和妇女参与采掘工业通常限于非法或小规模采矿。虽然手工和小规模采矿很有前途,在创造就业和企业发展方面有潜力,但这个部门仍然处于备选方案的边缘,被认为是大多数青年和妇女的最后手段。该部门的特点是缺乏政府监管,忽视安全、健康和环境保护问题。来自整个非洲大陆和其他发展中国家的观察表明,ASM是贫困社区就业和经济发展的强大来源。因此可以说,对非洲大陆的青年和妇女来说,ASM提供了机会,因此需要将其正式化并作为一种可行的经济参与选择加以促进,特别是在贫穷社区内。利用二手数据来源,本文将南非各部门倡导的合作社方法作为一种经过验证的模式进行了展望,这种模式可以在南部非洲发展共同体(SADC)地区复制,以补充现有的政策工具,如SADC采矿协议和非洲联盟(AU)采矿愿景。本文认为,合作社为青年和妇女提供了一种低门槛的ASM倡议正规化方式,从而可以在采掘业内建立法律实体。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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