Constructing a Crisis: The Effect of Resource Curse Discourse on Extractive Governance in Ghana
Publisher: Extractive Industries and Society
Author(s): McKenzie F. Johnson, Rebecca L. Laurent, and Benjamin Kwao
Date: 2020
Topics: Conflict Causes, Extractive Resources, Governance
Countries: Ghana
Ghana’s 2007 oil discovery prompted widespread concern about the “political resource curse.” Ghanaian policymakers, in partnership with the international community, mobilized resource curse discourse to propel innovative reforms aimed at building institutional capacity, enhancing transparency, and promoting accountability. Ghana’s urgent and decisive response to the problem of oil, however, highlighted its relative lack of resolve to address enduring mineral conflict. In this article, the authors employ fieldwork, event ethnography, and a content analysis of 1,003 articles published in Ghana’s Daily Graphic (2006-2012) to trace the discursive and material effects of oil on Ghana’s extractive governance landscape. The paper argues that global discourse around oil grounded in the resource curse centered Ghana’s political attention on oil relative to conventional minerals like gold, and reinforced modes of extractive governance that overlook longstanding violence around gold extraction. The research demonstrates the continued power of resource curse discourse to construct a model of natural resource governance and conflict that remains disconnected from lived experience. The authors question the utility of the resource curse as a lens through which to view resource-conflict linkages by demonstrating how it fails to capture important aspects of the relationship between resource extraction, governance, and violent conflict.