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Recolonizing Africa

Mariam Mniga

An Ethnography of Land Acquisition, Mining, and Resource Control

Barcode 9781032661681
Paperback

Original price £52.56 - Original price £52.56
Original price
£52.56
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Release Date: 19/03/2024

Genre: Society & Culture
Label: Routledge
Series: New Critical Viewpoints on Society
Language: English
Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd

An Ethnography of Land Acquisition, Mining, and Resource Control

Explaining how the legacy of colonialism and the nature of the liberal economy play a significant role in the development of Africa today, keeping the continent poor and dependent, Recolonizing Africa explains how trade liberalization, deregulation, and privatization had opened doors for the new scramble for Africa.


Received an honorable mention at the Wallerstein Memorial Book Awards

Explaining how the legacy of colonialism and the nature of the liberal economy play a significant role in the development of Africa today, keeping Africa poor and dependent, this book explains how trade liberalization, deregulation, and privatization had opened doors for the New Scramble for Africa.

Green technology and the high demand for electronics have intensified Africa’s role as a supplier of raw materials, natural resources, and cheap labor and as a large market of more than one billion people in the global economy. This unique ethnographic study, with elements of autoethnography, starts with the author's journey to Bulyanhulu, Tanzania, one of the largest gold mines in Africa, and moves to a broader analysis that reveals the systemic violence of resource extraction. Focus groups, interviews, and observations demonstrate the lack of distributive justice and intersectional equality in the process of land acquisition and resource extraction, described by villagers in racialized and gendered terms as exploitative and part of a racist system that fails to provide a fair distribution of benefits to local people.

Recolonizing Africa examines resource conflicts among local people, governments, and transnational corporations from Europe, North America, and Asia, revealing how global systemic violence and irresponsible business practices precipitate economic inequality between African and financially rich nations – threatening peace and security, indigenous rights, and the environment.