Javascript must be enabled to continue!
Ethical Challenges for Mineral Resource Extraction in Sierra Leone
View through CrossRef
<p>Sierra Leone is one of the world&#8217;s poorest countries and has been so for over 40 years. It is currently ranked by the IMF as the tenth poorest country with a per capita GDP of $505. In recent years it has been ravaged by civil war (1991-2002) and paralysed by the Ebola virus. Yet it is a country rich in mineral resources &#8211; in particular diamonds, thus an economy highly dependent upon geoscientific knowledge. Sierra Leone therefore serves as an illustration of other African countries also rich in mineral resources. At The Faraday Institute for Science and Religion in Cambridge we are engaged in research into the relationship between Science, Faith and Human flourishing. However, in Sierra Leone the application of geoscientific knowledge is not leading to human flourishing. In fact the reverse is true. Maconachie, writing in 2012, states that &#8216;today, some of the worst poverty in Sierra Leone is concentrated in diamond mining towns&#8217;. In this particular context therefore the application of geoscience prevents human flourishing, a topic discussed elsewhere as the &#8216;resource curse&#8217;. It is suggested that an appropriate solution can be found in the concept of a &#8216;preferential option for the poor&#8217; rooted in a Christian understanding of God&#8217;s priority for the poor.</p><p>Diamonds have been mined in Sierra Leone since the 1930&#8217;s and in 2016 it was Africa&#8217;s seventh largest diamond producer and diamond exports made the largest contribution to the GDP. Much of the mining is alluvial and the deposits, distributed over several thousand km<sup>2</sup>, are impossible to police. This has led to widespread illegal artisanal mining, extreme social exploitation through patronage, diamond smuggling, the funding and prolonging of a civil war.&#160;Further, legally exported diamonds yield a very low return to the local economy and there is a lack of economic transparency.</p><p>The fact that mining was not included in the UN 1992 Agenda 21, the Agenda for Sustainable Development means that the minerals industry globally is controlled almost entirely by the &#8216;free play of a market that is interested primarily in profits&#8217;. Recent models of sustainable development challenge this view and now see people as a part of the total ecosystem, so success is measured in terms of its long term contribution to human flourishing and will be expressed in respectful and authentic relationships at a local level between a mine and its community.</p><p>At a governmental level Sierra Leone is seeking to adopt the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative requiring greater corporate and social responsibility on the part of mining companies. This initiative, which has received a renewed emphasis under President Bio, is designed to ensure that the &#8216;natural resource wealth becomes an engine for sustainable economic growth and poverty eradication in Sierra Leone&#8217;. However, it is unclear whether a governmental initiative can generate suitable authentic relationships at a local level. It is suggested here that locally based faith communities, where natural networks already exist, can play a better role in generating long-term authentic relationships between mine and community to foster human flourishing.</p>
Title: Ethical Challenges for Mineral Resource Extraction in Sierra Leone
Description:
<p>Sierra Leone is one of the world&#8217;s poorest countries and has been so for over 40 years.
It is currently ranked by the IMF as the tenth poorest country with a per capita GDP of $505.
In recent years it has been ravaged by civil war (1991-2002) and paralysed by the Ebola virus.
Yet it is a country rich in mineral resources &#8211; in particular diamonds, thus an economy highly dependent upon geoscientific knowledge.
Sierra Leone therefore serves as an illustration of other African countries also rich in mineral resources.
At The Faraday Institute for Science and Religion in Cambridge we are engaged in research into the relationship between Science, Faith and Human flourishing.
However, in Sierra Leone the application of geoscientific knowledge is not leading to human flourishing.
In fact the reverse is true.
Maconachie, writing in 2012, states that &#8216;today, some of the worst poverty in Sierra Leone is concentrated in diamond mining towns&#8217;.
In this particular context therefore the application of geoscience prevents human flourishing, a topic discussed elsewhere as the &#8216;resource curse&#8217;.
It is suggested that an appropriate solution can be found in the concept of a &#8216;preferential option for the poor&#8217; rooted in a Christian understanding of God&#8217;s priority for the poor.
</p><p>Diamonds have been mined in Sierra Leone since the 1930&#8217;s and in 2016 it was Africa&#8217;s seventh largest diamond producer and diamond exports made the largest contribution to the GDP.
Much of the mining is alluvial and the deposits, distributed over several thousand km<sup>2</sup>, are impossible to police.
This has led to widespread illegal artisanal mining, extreme social exploitation through patronage, diamond smuggling, the funding and prolonging of a civil war.
&#160;Further, legally exported diamonds yield a very low return to the local economy and there is a lack of economic transparency.
</p><p>The fact that mining was not included in the UN 1992 Agenda 21, the Agenda for Sustainable Development means that the minerals industry globally is controlled almost entirely by the &#8216;free play of a market that is interested primarily in profits&#8217;.
Recent models of sustainable development challenge this view and now see people as a part of the total ecosystem, so success is measured in terms of its long term contribution to human flourishing and will be expressed in respectful and authentic relationships at a local level between a mine and its community.
</p><p>At a governmental level Sierra Leone is seeking to adopt the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative requiring greater corporate and social responsibility on the part of mining companies.
This initiative, which has received a renewed emphasis under President Bio, is designed to ensure that the &#8216;natural resource wealth becomes an engine for sustainable economic growth and poverty eradication in Sierra Leone&#8217;.
However, it is unclear whether a governmental initiative can generate suitable authentic relationships at a local level.
It is suggested here that locally based faith communities, where natural networks already exist, can play a better role in generating long-term authentic relationships between mine and community to foster human flourishing.
</p>.
Related Results
Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
Materialism and Environmental Knowledge as a Mediator for Relationships between Religiosity and Ethical Consumption
ABSTRACTOn a global and regional scale, Indonesia has one of the least environmentally sustainable economies in the Asia-Pacific region. Consumption is one of the key factors contr...
2.A. Round table: From Ebola to COVID-19: lessons learned from health systems strengthening efforts and system shocks
2.A. Round table: From Ebola to COVID-19: lessons learned from health systems strengthening efforts and system shocks
Abstract
Five years after the devastating Ebola outbreak in West Africa, the health systems in Guinea and Sierra Leone are fac...
Cannabis use and its psychosocial correlates among school-going adolescents in Sierra Leone
Cannabis use and its psychosocial correlates among school-going adolescents in Sierra Leone
Abstract
Background
In Sierra Leone, adolescents are increasingly engaging in risky activities, including cannabis use, which can lead to substance ...
SSHAP West Africa Hub: Addressing the Kush Epidemic in Sierra Leone
SSHAP West Africa Hub: Addressing the Kush Epidemic in Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone has seen a sharp rise in the use of ‘kush’ – a relatively new drug formed through mixing several constituent drugs, including opioids, which is proving highly addictiv...
Cannabis use and its psychosocial correlates among school-going adolescents in Sierra Leone.
Cannabis use and its psychosocial correlates among school-going adolescents in Sierra Leone.
Abstract
Background: Adolescents who use cannabis are more prone to participate in risky activities, such as taking other drugs, doing poorly in school, and exhibiting psyc...
Women’s knowledge of symptoms of obstetric fistula, experiences, and associated factors in Sierra Leone
Women’s knowledge of symptoms of obstetric fistula, experiences, and associated factors in Sierra Leone
Background
Obstetric fistula is a devastating childbirth condition that results from prolonged obstructed labour without timely medical intervention, leading to a tear between the ...
La expedición del naturalista alsaciano Guillaume Philippe Schimper a Sierra Nevada en 1847 / The expedition of the Alsatian naturalist Guillaume-Philippe Schimper to Sierra Nevada in 1847
La expedición del naturalista alsaciano Guillaume Philippe Schimper a Sierra Nevada en 1847 / The expedition of the Alsatian naturalist Guillaume-Philippe Schimper to Sierra Nevada in 1847
En 1847 los alsacianos Daniel Dollfus-Ausset y Guillaume-Philippe Schimper realizaron una expedición a Sierra Nevada, en el sur de España. Su objetivo era la búsqueda de una nueva ...
Modelling the Effect of Macroeconomic Rigidities on Market Competition in Sierra Leone
Modelling the Effect of Macroeconomic Rigidities on Market Competition in Sierra Leone
This paper explores the intricate relationship between macroeconomic indicators and imperfect competition in Sierra Leone, employing a prototype of an imperfect competition structu...


