Anthropology of Mining Network

Current Convenors
Lorenzo D`Angelo: , Sapienza University of Rome
Kyra Grieco:
Deana Jovanović.

Previous Convenors
Filipe Calvão: , Graduate Institute of International and Development Studies, Geneva
Nikkie Wiegink: , Department of Cultural Anthropology, Utrecht University
Robert Pijpers: , Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Hamburg

Founders (2014)
Lorenzo D`Angelo: , Sapienza University of Rome
Robert Pijpers:, Institute of Social and Cultural Anthropology, University of Hamburg

The numerous amounts of recent publications on the extraction of a wide range of raw materials (i.e. gold, diamonds, iron, copper, aluminum, cobalt, tin, uranium) signals the increased interest in establishing a better understanding of the extractive practices and their impact on environments and communities around the world. This interest is not surprising: the global production of commodities (and the global economy as whole) is largely dependent on local productive and extractive systems of raw materials. Recent economic and environmental crises have made more clear than ever the risks and limits, as well as the opportunities, of mine development. Indeed, mining practices shape environments and society in problematic ways; subsequently, it heavily impacts upon, and it is a matter of concern for the life-worlds of many people. As anthropological research on mining clearly shows, raw materials, and minerals in particular, are not simply local products to be extracted and globally commoditized. Any extracted material comes from a certain cultural space, is embedded in a political and ecological context and it is formed and framed in specific histories. In other words, it is a highly socialized product; its extraction is a complex and contested political, economic and social process.

Although the anthropology of mining is relatively under-established as a field of research, anthropology is highly suitable to critically understand and makes practical proposals over a wide range of issues, such as conflicts over the management of resources among and within communities; labor and industrial relations in mining companies; sexuality, infectious diseases and migration to and from mining areas; indigenous rights over local resources and corporate responsibility of large scale mining.

During the EASA 2014 conference in Tallinn some of these issues arose among the participants of the panel dedicated to mining technologies. As in previous panels on mining organized at the EASA biennial meetings, it drew a considerable audience and raised highly relevant questions related to a variety of anthropological inquiries ranging from modernity, religion, trust, political discourse to questions of property, land, mobility and heritage. Significantly, discussions in Tallinn developed into a manifest and general expression of interest in establishing a more formal and sustainable collaboration through the formation of a network.

Objectives
The Anthropology of Mining network aims at the following: bringing together scholars working on mining practices; establishing a comparative approach to different forms of mining of different types of minerals; understanding how mining is embedded in social, political, economic and environmental discourse and vice-versa; revive Ballard & Banks (2003) initiative to establish an Anthropology of Mining (a disciplinary focus that cross cuts all the subdisciplines, from material culture, to the anthropology of religion and economic anthropology); formally organize anthropologists with expertise on mining with the aim to create a stronger voice in public debates around extraction issues.

Activities

The activities of the network will be four-fold.