Inside Mining Capitalism
The Micropolitics of Work on the Congolese and Zambian Copperbelts
Download Url(s)
https://www.jstor.org/stable/10.2307/j.ctv289dw14Author(s)
McNamara, Thomas
Rubbers, Benjamin
Musonda, James
Geenen, Kristien
Contributor(s)
Rubbers, Benjamin (editor)
McNamara, Thomas (editor)
Musonda, James (editor)
Geenen, Kristien (editor)
Language
EnglishAbstract
Since the beginning of the 21st century, African countries with mineral resources have witnessed an unprecedented rise in foreign direct investments and the development of new flexible workforce management practices in the mining industry. But what does this mean for those who actually work in this industry? Based on research in the Congo and Zambia, where a mining boom has led to more than thirty new mining projects in recent years, this book explores the processes of improvisation and adaptation behind the emergence of this neoliberal labour regime. The contributors show how mining projects' labour practices have been mediated, negotiated, or resisted by mine workers, unionists, and human resource managers. They discuss variations in labour practices put in place by new mining projects depending on the type of capital involved, the type of mine being developed, and their location. Finally, the book examines the implications of power dynamics surrounding companies' labour strategies from the broader perspective of the responsibility of trade unions, gender equality, and identity politics.
Keywords
Anthropology; Development Studies; Population StudiesISBN
9781800103184, 9781847012869Publisher
Boydell & BrewerPublication date and place
2021Imprint
James Currey an imprint of Boydell & BrewerSeries
African Issues,Classification
Social & cultural anthropology, ethnography
Development studies
Human geography
Social and cultural anthropology
Development studies
Human geography