Using in-depth ethnographic analysis of Kejetia’s artisanal gold mining community in Tongo (Northern Ghana), this article argues that governance is based on artisanal gold miners’ three-dimensional orientation towards both ‘above-ground’ social–political relations and regulations (a geometrically two-dimensional orientation) and the ‘subterranean’ geological sphere (which literally adds depth and a third geometric dimension). A substance relation to gold also means that its properties and geological context strongly influence miners’ micro governance, as do miners’ cosmological perceptions of gold’s relationship to the above-ground and subterranean spheres. Hence, gold acquisition is embedded in a web of geological, social and cosmological relations beyond actual excavation. Artisanal mining policy and research should recognise the impact of this threedimensional orientation and substance approach.
CITATION STYLE
van de Camp, E. (2016). Artisanal gold mining in Kejetia (Tongo, Northern Ghana): a three-dimensional perspective. Third World Thematics: A TWQ Journal, 1(2), 267–283. https://doi.org/10.1080/23802014.2016.1229132
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