1: Resource extraction and inclusive development: extending the
bases of the political settlements approach
2: Mining, political settlements, and inclusive development in
Peru
3: Political settlements, natural resource extraction, and
inclusion in Bolivia
4: The politics of natural resource extraction in Zambia
5: Competitive clientelism and the political economy of mining in
Ghana
6: Conclusions: Interpreting the politics of natural resource
extraction
Anthony Bebbington is Australia Laureate Fellow at the University
of Melbourne, and from 2010-2017 was Director of the Graduate
School of Geography at Clark University where he is also Milton P.
and Alice C. Higgins Professor of Environment and Society (on
leave). He is a member of the US National Academy of Sciences and
the American Academy of Arts and Sciences, and has been a
Guggenheim Fellow and held fellowships at the Center for Advanced
Studies in the
Behavioral Sciences, Stanford, the Iberoamerican Institute/Free
University in Berlin among others. He is also Professorial Fellow
at the Global Development Institute of the University of Manchester
and
Research Associate with Rimisp-Latin American Centre for Rural
Development in Chile.
Abdul-Gafaru Abdulai is a Senior Lecturer at the University of
Ghana Business School, and an Honorary Research Fellow at the
Global Development Institute, University of Manchester, UK. Dr.
Abdulai holds a First Class Bachelors degree in Political Science
from the University of Ghana (Legon-Accra), an MPhil in Development
Studies from the University of Cambridge (UK), and a PhD in
Development Policy and Management from the University of Manchester
(UK). His work has been published by African
Affairs; New Political Economy, Democratization, Development Policy
Review; European Journal of Development Research; and the Journal
of International Development. He won the prestigious Herti
Gesseling
Prize for best paper authored by an African-based scholar in 2016.
Denise Humphreys Bebbington is Research Associate Professor of
International Development and Social Change at Clark University,
and from 2012 to 2016 was also Director of the Women and Gender
Studies Program at Clark. Previously she has been Latin America
Coordinator for the Global Greengrants Fund and Foundation
Representative to Peru for the Inter-American Foundation, among
other research and development positions. Her
research has addressed the interactions among indigenous peoples
and hydrocarbons development in Bolivia, extractive industry
conflicts, gender and resource governance, women and micro-finance,
and the roles
of NGOs in development. She holds a PhD in Development Studies from
the University of Manchester, and a B.A. in History from the
University of California at Berkeley. She is a member of the
Editorial Board of Extractive Industries and Society. Marja
Hinfelaar is a historian and political analyst. She is Director of
Research and Programs at the Southern African Institute for Policy
and Research, where she coordinates research projects, the Cornell
University Summer Pogram, the Zambia
Legal Information Institute, the Economic Policy Resources Centre,
and publications. She received her PhD in History in 2001 from the
University of Utrecht, the Netherlands. She was previously the
coordinator of
digitization projects, based at the National Archives of Zambia.
She is Member of Advisory Board of the Journal of Southern African
Studies, and editor of the Zambia Social Science Journal. Cynthia
Sanborn is Vice President for Research at the Universidad del
Pacífico in Lima, Peru, where she is also a Professor of Political
Science. She has written and edited articles and books on issues
related to politics and development in Latin America, including
work on corporate
social responsibility and the extractive industries, and Chinese
investment in that region. Sanborn is part of the Working Group on
Development and the Environment in the Americas at Boston
University, and has held the William
Henry Bloomberg Chair at Harvard University. She has been a program
officer for the Ford Foundation, and member of the national working
group of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI)
in Peru. She holds a PhD and MA in Government from Harvard
University and a BA in Political Science from the University of
Chicago.
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