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Ethnic Tensions, Tantalum, and the Effects of the Global Market
Author(s) -
Jonathan Andrew Stewart Honig,
Matthew Booth
Publication year - 2020
Publication title -
journal of power politics and governance
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
eISSN - 2372-4919
pISSN - 2372-4927
DOI - 10.15640/jppg.v8n1a1
Subject(s) - tantalum , ethnic group , subject (documents) , democracy , political science , variety (cybernetics) , phenomenon , value (mathematics) , political economy , development economics , sociology , criminology , law , economics , politics , epistemology , computer science , chemistry , philosophy , organic chemistry , artificial intelligence , machine learning , library science
The phenomenon of illicit wealth being used to fuel conflicts around the world is a well-known subject. Such wealth can come from a variety of sources including human-trafficking, the sale of narcotics, and the exploitation of naturally occurring resources. This last source, specifically of a particular mineral known as coltan (which is also known as tantalum, the refined substance derived from freshly mined raw coltan), is a subject which this article analyzes further. Specifically, this article will attempt to discern whether the discovery and/or presence of deposits of coltan/tantalum will exacerbate previously existing ethnic tensions to the point of violent conflict. In doing so, we utilize the Democratic Republic of Congo as our qualitative case study. Further, this article will attempt to analyze whether increasing global demand for tantalum will cause the value of the mineral to increase in a way which will potentially intensify previously existing ethnic conflicts.

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