AbstractsPolitical Science

Strategic Sovereignty: Essays on Goods Provision, Conflict, and Governance in Regions of Natural Resource Extraction.

by Jessica Steinberg




Institution: University of Michigan
Department: Political Science
Degree: PhD
Year: 2014
Keywords: political economy of natural resources; Africa; mixed methods; Political Science; Social Sciences
Record ID: 2041823
Full text PDF: http://hdl.handle.net/2027.42/110382


Abstract

Why do some natural resource extractive projects experience local resistance and others do not? Why does a government vary in its response to this resistance? I explore the strategic interaction among a firm, government, and local population in order to explain variation in the following local governance outcomes: goods provision, protest, and government repression in regions of natural resource extraction. I argue that the extent and nature of government engagement reflects perceived tradeoffs between revenue and political support specific to the region. In doing so, I advance our understanding of the effect of non-state actors on governance outcomes in regions of limited state presence. I introduce a formal model of firm, local community, and government interaction to develop the strategic logic underpinning the different outcomes in regions of natural resource extractive regions. I then conduct a comparative case study of coal extractive sites in Mozambique, and copper extractive sites in Zambia and DRC, which provides a plausible account of the mechanisms proposed in the formal model. Finally, I develop a dataset and find empirical support for the hypotheses derived from the formal mode and which are elucidated in the comparative case study.