制度融合与加纳非法小规模采金业

Institutional coalescence and illegal small scale gold mining in Ghana

World Development · 2024
被引 9
人大 A-ABS 3

中文导读

研究了加纳非法小规模采金业中制度融合如何解释权力关系、非法活动如何被社会接受并合法化,对理解社会组织和制度变迁有贡献。

Abstract

• Illegal gold mining presents numerous and seemingly intractable societal challenges in many developing countries. • The article introduces the concept of institutional coalescence to explain power relations. • Coalescence also explains how illegality becomes socially embedded and legitimate. • This contributes to understandings of social organization, agency, and emerging institutions. Across sub-Saharan Africa powerful sites of illegal gold mining challenge and change the workings of a range of statutory and non-statutory institutions, providing rich contexts for investigating institutional complexity. In Ghana, illegal mining contributes an increasing share of gold produced, attracting a large and diverse body of scholarship. This article provides an original and critical analysis of the emerging institutional forms and processes of social accept around the illegal extraction. In so doing it contributes to scholarship on two fronts: By exploring the interconnectedness and changeability of institutions it contributes empirically to understandings and evidence of social processes around the illegal extraction of gold in the Global south, and more broadly about contested sites of resource extraction. Second, it introduces the concept of institutional coalescence to explain and interpret the sociopolitical landscape of shifting power relations at the local level, which successfully meld and change the workings of formal state law, officialdom, and customary norms. In a broader perspective this contributes to understandings of relations between individual agency, organisational behaviour, institutions, and social context.

非法小规模采金制度融合社会嵌入加纳