Mining Empires: Gold, Diamonds, and the Political Economy of Southern Africa
MTA
An economic and social history of mineral extraction, labor regimes, and state formation in Southern Africa
2nd Edition
*Mining Empires: Gold, Diamonds, and the Political Economy of Southern Africa* provides a comprehensive historical analysis of how mineral extraction transformed the social, economic, and political structures of Southern Africa from the nineteenth century to the present. The book traces the shift from indigenous mining and regional trade to the industrial revolutions sparked by diamonds at Kimberley and gold on the Witwatersrand. This transition established a "mineral-energy complex" characterized by deep-level mining, massive capital investment from global finance hubs, and a highly coercive migrant labor system. Central to this history is the role of the state and corporate bodies, such as the Chamber of Mines, in engineering a racialized labor hierarchy and a legal framework of land dispossession and pass laws that effectively subsidized industrial growth through the exploitation of Black workers.
The narrative extends beyond the mines to the regional hinterlands—including Mozambique, Lesotho, Zambia, and Namibia—exploring how the demand for labor and the discovery of other minerals like copper and offshore diamonds created a vast, interdependent economic network. The book details the lived experiences of miners and their families, highlighting the social worlds of the closed compounds, the rise of urban townships, and the critical role of women in sustaining rural households amidst systemic male absence. It also addresses the grim physical costs of extraction, documenting the prevalence of occupational diseases like silicosis and tuberculosis and the long-standing political struggles for compensation, labor rights, and racial equity that eventually challenged the apartheid order.
In its later chapters, the book examines the postcolonial and post-apartheid turns, focusing on the nationalization of resources, the rise of Black Economic Empowerment, and the challenges of managing mineral revenues through sovereign wealth funds. It critiques the environmental legacy of mining, such as acid mine drainage and land degradation, and the difficult process of deindustrialization as old mining centers face depletion and closure. Ultimately, the work situates Southern Africa’s mineral wealth within a global context of commodity cycles and technological change, arguing that the future of the region depends on governance characterized by transparency, community consent, and a "just transition" for the workers and landscapes left in the wake of extraction.
This book is essential reading for students and scholars of African history, economic history, and resource politics, particularly those interested in labor systems, colonialism, and postcolonial development. It will also valuable for policymakers, development practitioners, and mining industry professionals seeking to understand the historical roots of contemporary inequality and governance challenges in Southern Africa's extractive sectors. Researchers studying the global political economy of minerals and the longue durée of resource extraction will find its comprehensive analysis particularly insightful.
January 18, 2026
91,109 words
6 hours 23 minutes
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