3 research outputs found

    Corporate Social Responsibility of Mining Companies in Ghana: The case of Newmont Ghana Gold Limited at Ahafo

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    It is perceived by many that communities in Ghana that host large scale mining activities are affluent and outpace several other communities in terms of socio-economic development. This seems not to be the case. This notwithstanding, mining companies have an obligation to fulfil towards the communities they operate within as part of their Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR). This necessitated an assessment of the Corporate Social Responsibility of Newmont Ghana Gold Limited at Ahafo in Ghana. This paper considered relevant literature pertaining to the subject matter, the views of community members within the mining enclave of Ahafo as well as that of Newmont Ghana Gold Limited. A sample of 180 respondents was chosen through a purposive sampling technique. Key personalities including an Assemblyman, a Youth Leader, and three resettled persons were interviewed. There was also a focused group discussion among community members. The study found out Newmont has not deviated from its CSR in the region

    A history of gold mining in the Asante region of Ghana (1950-1972)

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    This doctoral research project addresses the significant lacunae in the inadequate inclusive understanding of Ghana’s gold mining history over the late colonial and early post-colonial period that encompass multiple socio-political actors in the industry’s encounters with state and society. The thesis examines the overarching contestations among multiple social and political actors over access to the potential benefits to be derived from mineral extraction within this changing socio-political landscape. It utilises a wide range of archival materials encompassing colonial and post-colonial state and mining companies’ records, combined with in-depth oral histories with diverse mining communities’ actors with lived experiences of these settings, dating to the mid-to-late twentieth century. While the study period saw the dominance of industrialised gold mining with accompanied political-economic policies and socio-cultural norms that prevented artisanal mining operations in the study communities, access to the resultant industrially generated mineral wealth took multiple and diverse forms. It transcended the often-explored state-company-worker relations within the formal masculinised industrial extractive sector, and is here analysed in relation to a pluralist understanding of these mining communities. The thesis demonstrates the need to understand Ghana’s gold mining history during this period in an inclusive and nuanced way, emphasising the agency of diverse social and political actors ranging from elite political and economic actors from the colonial metropole to the national, and then to local subaltern members of mining communities, within a single analytical framework. Against the background that historical reality often defies the logic of rigid periodisation, the thesis provides an inclusive understanding of how these diverse actors navigated change and contested—albeit commonly in unequal ways—access to the benefits generated by mineral resources based on ideas that were both historically continuous and radically transforming during the period under analysis

    A history of gold mining in the Asante region of Ghana (1950-1972)

    No full text
    This doctoral research project addresses the significant lacunae in the inadequate inclusive understanding of Ghana’s gold mining history over the late colonial and early post-colonial period that encompass multiple socio-political actors in the industry’s encounters with state and society. The thesis examines the overarching contestations among multiple social and political actors over access to the potential benefits to be derived from mineral extraction within this changing socio-political landscape. It utilises a wide range of archival materials encompassing colonial and post-colonial state and mining companies’ records, combined with in-depth oral histories with diverse mining communities’ actors with lived experiences of these settings, dating to the mid-to-late twentieth century. While the study period saw the dominance of industrialised gold mining with accompanied political-economic policies and socio-cultural norms that prevented artisanal mining operations in the study communities, access to the resultant industrially generated mineral wealth took multiple and diverse forms. It transcended the often-explored state-company-worker relations within the formal masculinised industrial extractive sector, and is here analysed in relation to a pluralist understanding of these mining communities. The thesis demonstrates the need to understand Ghana’s gold mining history during this period in an inclusive and nuanced way, emphasising the agency of diverse social and political actors ranging from elite political and economic actors from the colonial metropole to the national, and then to local subaltern members of mining communities, within a single analytical framework. Against the background that historical reality often defies the logic of rigid periodisation, the thesis provides an inclusive understanding of how these diverse actors navigated change and contested—albeit commonly in unequal ways—access to the benefits generated by mineral resources based on ideas that were both historically continuous and radically transforming during the period under analysis.</p
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