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Community development at the coal face

Networks and sustainability among artisanal mining communities in Indwe, Eastern Cape Province, South Africa

Article image

Matthew Gibb, Tony Binns, Etienne Nel

23 April 2013

The Geographical Journal

English

Mining Towns Librarian

Journal article

Municipal Capability & Partnership Programme

Africa

Artisanal, or small-scale mining, is widely recognised as a key, but often controversial, survival strategy adopted by low-income communities in the global South. This paper, published in The Geographical Journal Volume 180 Issue 2,  examines how members of one community in South Africa, that of Indwe, in a desperate effort to create self-employment, have initiated micro-level coal-mining enterprises, which have had the downstream effect of supporting local transportation and brick-making operations. Government concerns over the legality of these activities overlie the recent depletion of the local resource and the involvement of a mining corporate in the region. In terms of the way forward, the paper explores the uneasy compromise which has emerged between the corporate's social responsibility initiatives and the suspicions of the artisanal miners.

 

This resource is part of the Mining Towns Collection kindly sponsored by the Municipal Capability and Partnership Programme. Abstract based on source.

 

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Built environment

Community self help

Employment

Governance

Informal sector

Mining Towns

Mining Towns Collection

Poverty & inequality

South Africa

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