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- Convenors:
-
Ezekia Mtetwa
(Uppsala University)
Joseph Mujere (University of York)
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Short Abstract:
Africa's mineral resources have been mined for more than two millennia. We take the longue duree perspective to unravel the intertwined history of mining and urbanisation on the continent. In particular, we invite discussion on how the two phenomena unfolded in changing patterns of globalised trade.
Long Abstract:
The varied mineral resources on the African continent have been exploited for more than two millennia. Before the advent of colonialism in the 19th century, iron, gold, tin and copper had already been mined, distributed and consumed in extensive long-distance, regional and intercontinental connections, leading to the rise of early urbanism and statehood in Africa. The colonial period onwards expanded the scale of exploitation of these minerals, incorporating new metals and gemstones, notably platinum, cobalt, diamond and tanzanite. We invite a multidisciplinary focus on this long history of mining and variety of mineral wealth in Africa. How far does the very constructed materiality of African urbanism reflect variation in the material and social practices of mining through time and space in Africa? To what extent and with what effects did shifts in the global events and connections drive local changes in the mining, distribution and consumption of particular mineral resources? African urbanism is often viewed as unsustainable, doomed and not working. How far can the making of Africa's urban systems and cities be viewed as a victim of the fate of the minerals which generated the development of both the ancient and contemporary cities? From the longue duree perspective, are we now in a position to understand the role of global events and the connection between regions and continents as drivers of local changes, particularly in the mining of Africa's minerals.
Accepted papers:
Session 1 Wednesday 12 June, 2019, -Paper short abstract:
This paper uses insights from the notion of risk to explore how the local and global dynamics of supply and demand of iron in particular and other minerals such as gold and copper would have posed a challenge to Great Zimbabwe's sustainability as an economy and society.
Paper long abstract:
Great Zimbabwe, arguably southern Africa's earliest and largest Iron Age city-state, has perhaps the earliest and longest history of mining the Zimbabwe plateau's rich mineral deposits, particularly iron, gold and copper. During its urban phase spanning the 12th and 16th centuries AD, Great Zimbabwe underwent phenomenal growth, generating monumentality and international trade links arguably from mineral wealth, which also anchored the local agro-pastoralist economy. Research has illuminated the existence of considerable mining and preindustrial technologies in Great Zimbabwe with complex and innovative designs and processes of extracting quality metals, given the settlement's significance. Yet, this conjoined early history of mining and the rise of urbanism, social complexity and statehood in a matrix of dynamic international trade systems, remains largely unexplored for understanding sustainable economies and societies in the longue durée. This paper uses insights from the notion of risk to explore how the local and global dynamics of supply and demand of iron in particular and other minerals such as gold and copper would have posed a challenge to Great Zimbabwe' sustainability as an economy and society. This way of thinking has the potential to yield alternative and historically nuanced insights into the roots, legacies and impacts of Africa's globalised mineral economies and urbanism.
Paper short abstract:
Drawing on Burawoy (1985)'s thesis, the paper argues that manufacturing of consent in South Africa's platinum mining industry goes beyond the workplace. The paper identifies a new critical form of consent forged between mining capital and local communities through unemployment forums.
Paper long abstract:
The transition to democracy and advance towards a neoliberal form of capitalism has seen a decline in the traditional recruitment patterns in South Africa's mining sector. The old patterns tied to the migrant labour system are still present but waning. New institutions linked to a reconfiguration of the patterns of mining labour supply are emerging. These changes are linked to the shift in the employer strategy and have been examined by a number of studies from that perspective. Many of these studies do not explore beyond capital strategy and how these patterns may shift through collective agency drawn beyond the employment relationship. This paper closes this gap by focusing on how local communities' collective agency may inform mining capital recruitment patterns. We present this drawing from an ethnographic study of Rustenburg platinum belt recruitment regime which we argue is a new form of manufacturing consent outside the employment relationship. Drawing from Burawoy (1985) thesis, the paper argues that consent for the mining capital in the post-apartheid dispensation may not only be forged between capital, workers and their trade unions. We identify a new critical form of consent forged between mining capital and the local community through unemployment forums. These are emerging in the platinum belt as new spaces for the manufacturing of consent between mining capital and the local communities. We argue that consent manufactured by capital and unions must be articulated to that forged between capital and the community for it to be sustainable.
Paper short abstract:
There are several pointers to Great Zimbabwe as have strived a lot from gold trade.The paper argues that recent mining activities along the Great Zimbabwe Masvingo road by amakorokoza attests to the presence of gold in the area.
Paper long abstract:
There is evidence that during its heydays people who established Great Zimbabwe had access to gold of which the surplus was trade. Over the years different scholars have suggested that trade contributed immensely to the establishment of Great Zimbabwe as a state (Garlake 1973, 1970, Huffman 1972, Pikirayi 1999, 2001). It is widely believed that the gold that is found in archaeological contexts at Great Zimbabwe was coming from the Zimbabwe plateau as tribute. The immediate environs of Great Zimbabwe are largely portrayed as being devoid of any meaningful gold deposits. However, recent mining activities along the Great Zimbabwe Masvingo road by the makorokoza (small scale artisanal miners) attest to the presence of gold in the area. This paper takes a landscape approach taking into cognisance that activities that were happening a few kilometres from the site could have had an influence on the spatial configurations. It has been well documented that in the case of gold mining in Zimbabwe, the tendency has been to mine where there is evidence of ancient mining of the material (Summers, 1969). The presence of gold has been since observed but the origins or the gold mines remain one of the mysteries that the current paper unravels by providing parallels where ancient gold mining areas has been reopened. The paper argues that gold was mined not very far from the site as would be suggested by earlier scholars.