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Governing Extractives at the Local Level

9 September 2016 11:30AM EDT

  • Event

  • Ending 1:00PM EDT

The governance of extractive resource wealth has received significant academic, development and private sector attention. The focus on how to improve a countries’ ability to transform natural resource wealth into long-term sustainable development has, for the most part, been focused at the national level. Less attention has been paid to the process of governing extractives at the subnational level.
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The governance of extractive resource wealth has received significant academic, development and private sector attention. The focus on how to improve a countries’ ability to transform natural resource wealth into long-term sustainable development has, for the most part, been focused at the national level. Less attention has been paid to the process of governing extractives at the subnational level.

Communities near extraction sites are often disproportionately affected by social and environmental impacts and do not share proportionally in the jobs and other non-fiscal benefits that extractive projects generate. Unmet community expectations and deepening inequality between urban and rural areas can in turn lead to social conflict, which, in addition to risking lives and livelihoods in producing regions, can delay extractive projects, with significant costs for countries as a whole. When conflicts escalate into sustained violence, national peace and cohesion are at stake.





The Natural Resource Governance Institute (NRGI) and the Overseas Development Institute (ODI) co-hosted this event on 9 September. It aimed to tackle some of the key questions surrounding subnational extractive governance. Why is working at the national level not sufficient? How does extractive resource governance differ at the subnational level? And what can national and subnational governments do to improve the impact of subnational resource governance?

Keynote speaker
 
Daniel Kaufmann @kaufpost
  President and CEO
  NRGI
 
Contributing chair
 
Aoife McCullough @aoifemccullough
  Research fellow
  ODI
 
Speakers
 
Zainab Ahmed @ZainabAhmedS
  Minister of state for budget and national planning
  Nigerian National Planning Commission
 
Kevin Fox
  Mineral Exploration and Project Development
  Rio Tinto

Rani Febrianti @ranirule
  Head of legal information subsection
  Indonesia Ministry of Energy and Mineral Resources
 
James Van Alstine
  Associate professor in environmental policy
  Co-director, Sustainability Research Institute
  University of Leeds

Location
London, U.K.
Countries
Indonesia Nigeria