Dados Bibliográficos

AUTOR(ES) Jacqueline M. Smith , Juan C. Lucena , Oscar Jaime Restrepo Baena , M.F. Rojas , Eric Hobsbawm
AFILIAÇÃO(ÕES) Engineering, Design and Society Department, Colorado School of Mines, Golden, CO, USA, Facultad de Minas, Universidad Nacional de Colombia, Medellín, Colombia, Colorado School of Mines
ANO 1987
TIPO Book
ADICIONADO EM 2025-08-14
MD5 D3D6E0104C954B95A914088C804A8677

Resumo

Social science research about extraction often conflates mining and ore processing activities or disregards processing altogether. This article highlights the value of studying mineral processing as a distinct domain. Our article centers on processing plants used for artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM), where miners employ their 'empirical' knowledge about processing through bodily interactions with their ore to transform it into a commodity of universally recognized value: gold. In our ethnographic account of the processing practices in two ASGM towns in rural Colombia, external efforts to 'improve' mineworkers' ore-to-gold practices threatened the autonomy they otherwise experienced in their artisanal forms of organizing their labor. We trace the insights, critiques, and responses that emerged from the miners' positions within gold processing assemblages of knowledge, material affordances, technology, and sociopolitical organizations. Analyzing these miners' experiences provides novel perspectives for scholarship of workers' desires to preserve autonomy amid looming threats of deskilling.

Ferramentas