Oil in Chad and Equatorial Guinea: Widening the focus of the resource curse
Entidad
UAM. Departamento de Antropología Social y Pensamiento FilosóficoEditor
Palgrave Macmillan (part of Springer Nature)Fecha de edición
2013-07-11Cita
The European Journal of Development Research 25 (2013): 584-599ISSN
0957-8811 (print); 1743-9728 (on line)Versión del editor
https://doi.org/10.1057/ejdr.2013.25Materias
Equatorial Guinea; Chad; Oil; Resource curse theory; International political economy; AntropologíaDerechos
© 2013 Palgrave Macmillam (part of Springer Nature)Resumen
The exploration and extraction of oil in the territorial sea of Equatorial Guinea and Chad’s southern region of Doba have led to certain socio-economic and political dynamics among their populations. The literature developed around the concept of ‘resource curse’ is helpful in understanding how oil stimulates the governments’ rentier behaviour and authoritarianism, as well as the countries’ poverty and inequality. However, not all the similarities between the cases are explained by these approaches and some of the differences are relevant to understand the specific configuration of the curse in these countries. Only by taking into account historical trajectories, the particular strategies of local and non-local actors, and the international political economy in which oil is extracted and commercialised, can we properly analyse all these dynamics in their complexity.
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Google Scholar:Colom-Jaén, Artur
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Campos Serrano, Alicia
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