Mission Statement
Resource Nationalism in Southern Africa: Policy Challenges and Emerging Opportunities
This project strives to build a partnership for collaborative research on the impact of Resource Nationalism (RN) upon the extractive industries of Southern Africa, with the aim of informing and strengthening national policy processes and their developmental outcomes.
Research on RN in the mineral-rich countries in Southern Africa has typically been siloed at the national level, with little dialogue occurring among mining stakeholders in neighbouring states. As the pace of regulatory change has accelerated in the 2010s, critical knowledge gaps have opened up and policy communities have faced increasing challenges in making evidence-based decisions. There is now a pressing need for comparative research of RN experiences to support policy debates.
This project is the first multi-country, multi-partner investigation of contemporary RN in Southern Africa, and its findings will significantly inform current national and regional debates. The project will address critical knowledge gaps and mobilize research findings by engaging with researchers, policy makers, mining sector actors and civil society organisations as both key informants and beneficiaries of research.
The partnership brings together leading researchers and organisations in Canada and Tanzania, Zambia and Zimbabwe, the three mineral-rich countries which constitute the project’s case studies. The partnership is multidisciplinary in approach and assembles a rich diversity of experiences, research skills, disciplinary expertise, and network linkages.
The project’s specific goals are to:
- advance research and debate on issues of contemporary RN and the extractive industries in Africa and internationally, by contributing to knowledge on empirical case studies, research methodologies and theoretical frameworks;
- consolidate and expand the capacities of the partners in their research, knowledge mobilization and policy engagement activities;
- train emerging scholars, researchers, and activists with the aim of strengthening their research, networking and knowledge mobilization capacities; and,
- strengthen links between researchers and diverse mining sector stakeholders, with the dual aims of strengthening the governance of, and enhancing developmental gains from, the region’s extractive industries.