The Informalisation of Work: Illegal & Informal Mining from a Gender Perspective

Similar documents
Making illegal mining legal : The case of South Africa

Illegal Mining in South Africa

Extractive industries and sustainable job creation

AngloGold Ashanti. Formerly the Chamber of Mines of South Africa ARTISANAL AND SMALL-SCALE MINING. Position paper

ILLEGAL MINING IN SOUTH AFRICA

The Informal Economy and Sustainable Livelihoods

Illegal Mining in South Africa

Youth labour market overview

The Ghost Town Manifesto

Challenges and Opportunities for harnessing the Demographic Dividend in Africa

Consolidated Group Approach to Artisanal and Small- Scale Mining (ASM)

2018 MEETING OF SADC MINISTERS FOR EMPLOYMENT AND LABOUR AND SOCIAL PARTNERS

The Changing Discourse on Decent Work in South Africa:

Women's labour migration in the context of globalisation. Executive summary. Anja K. Franck & Andrea Spehar

2011 HIGH LEVEL MEETING ON YOUTH General Assembly United Nations New York July 2011

DFID with USAID and COMESA Trading for Peace

2. SOUTH AFRICAN SITUATION & BASIC ANALYSIS

REGIONAL MIGRATION IN SUB- SAHARAN AFRICA

Gender, labour and a just transition towards environmentally sustainable economies and societies for all

DECENT WORK IN TANZANIA

Information Seminar for African Members of. the ILO Governing Body

Youth labour market overview

Preliminary study on artisanal and small-scale mining in South Africa

Rural youth and internal migration Inputs to the United Nations World Youth Report Youth Migration and Development,

Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women

Labour migration, decent work and development: The ILO Rights-Based Approach

Internal Migration to the Gauteng Province

Green Economy and Inclusive Growth

FACT SHEET: HOUSING AND ACCOMMODATION

Organising migrant workers: Proposes toolkit for unions in South Africa. Introduction. Purpose of the toolkit. Target

REPORT FROM THE COMMISSION TO THE COUNCIL, THE EUROPEAN PARLIAMENT, THE EUROPEAN ECONOMIC AND SOCIAL COMMITTEE AND THE COMMITTEE OF THE REGIONS

New interventions and sustainable solutions

How to Generate Employment and Attract Investment

Building the South African Developmental State: Elusive Pipe Dream?

POLICY AREA A

Joint Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs, Defence, and Trade. Inquiry into establishing a Modern Slavery Act in Australia

Book reviews on global economy and geopolitical readings. ESADEgeo, under the supervision of Professor Javier Solana and Professor Javier Santiso.

ANALYSIS OF THE MIGRATION AND REFUGEE SITUATION IN AFRICA, WITH AN EMPHASIS ON SOUTHERN AFRICA.

Overview of the 2030 Agenda

Discrimination at Work: The Americas

Dangerous Labour: Migrants, Age, and Precarious Labour in Mumbai City

EU-EGYPT PARTNERSHIP PRIORITIES

Impacts of international cruise ship employment for i-kiribati women

An overview of migration in the SADC region. Vincent Williams

International Labour Convention Ratified by Guyana

Marginalised Urban Women in South-East Asia

ON HEIDI GOTTFRIED, GENDER, WORK, AND ECONOMY: UNPACKING THE GLOBAL ECONOMY (2012, POLITY PRESS, PP. 327)

20 th February To: The Joint Multi-Party Women s Caucus Chair: Hon RMS Morutoa

REVISITING THE YOUTH EMPLOYMENT CHALLENGE IN DEVELOPING COUNTRIES

Associated Sectors (Construction, Domestic Work and Sex Trafficking)

Ambassador of Australia (The Moderator) Executive Director of the ITC Secretary General UNCTAD Director General WTO Ambassadors Ladies and gentlemen

Inclusive growth and development founded on decent work for all

Claire Hobden & Frank Hoffer, ILO Bureau for Workers Activities

Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women Thirtieth session January 2004 Excerpted from: Supplement No.

Jobs, labour markets & shared growth Trends and issues

GLOBAL ECONOMIC CRISIS & GENDER EQUALITY THREATS, OPPORTUNITIES AND NECESSITIES

Mary Bosworth, Professor of Criminology, University of Oxford and Monash University

Modern Slavery Statement 2017

Social institutions, social policy and redistributive poverty reduction

Promoting growth through inclusive labor market policieies and institutions

Displacement and Urbanisation: assessing the levels of vulnerability of the refugee and urban slum populations in Dar Es Salaam, Tanzania

No Longer Invisible:

Addis Ababa, ETHIOPIA P. O. Box 3243 Telephone: ; Fax:

Addressing the challenges faced by migrant and minority women in the EU 1

Decent Work for the 21st Century

Strategy for Sweden s development cooperation with Zimbabwe

Regularising Zimbabwean Migration to South Africa

10 th Southern Africa Civil Society Forum (27th-30th July 2014, Harare, Zimbabwe)

The state of informal workers organisations in South Africa Sarah Mosoetsa October 2012

Rights. Strategy

Input to the Secretary General s report on the Global Compact Migration

Contribution from the European Women s Lobby to the European s Commission s Consultation paper on Europe s Social Reality 1

Strengthening Integration of the Economies in Transition into the World Economy through Economic Diversification

This is the most common structural change that had a huge impact on the economic development of a country.

KEY MESSAGES AND STRATEGIES FOR CSW61

In today s universal market economy, economic growth is

Reducing vulnerability and building resilience what does it entail? Andrew Shepherd, Chronic Poverty Advisory Network, Overseas Development

theses review series Gender, Migration and Communication Networks: Mapping the Communicative Ecology of Latin American Women in New Zealand/ Aotearoa

SOCIAL SECURITY and SOCIAL PROTECTION OF MIGRANTS IN SADC

ILO Poverty Reduction through Tourism Training Program MODULE 1 THE TOURISM INDUSTRY

Case Study on Youth Issues: Philippines

Small-scale mining & Human rights

Dr Cristiano d Orsi. Entry Accessibility. An analysis of the current entry requirements and the challenges facing the tourism industry

Migrations and the «race to the bottom» of European Labour Standards

6th T.20 MEETING. Antalya, Republic of Turkey, 30 September Policy Note

GENDER ISSUES IN ARTISANAL AND SMALL-SCALE MINING COMMUNITIES IN WAU/BULOLO AREAS OF MOROBE PROVINCE IN PAPUA NEW GUINEA COMMUNITY PERSPECTIVE.

Modern Slavery and Labour Exploitation. Guidance and Requirements for Suppliers. Balfour Beatty UK January 2018

Defining migratory status in the context of the 2030 Agenda

CDP Working Group on Gender and Development Women s work and livelihood prospects in the context of the current economic crisis

Conference on What Africa Can Do Now To Accelerate Youth Employment. Organized by

Trade and Human Dignity in the Workplace

Extending social protection to poorer informal workers

ASGM FORMALIZATION CASE STUDY OF ETHIOPIA. By Tamrat Mojo Beyene ASM, Director Ministry of Mines of Ethiopia Sep.2013

The Role of Public Private Partnerships in Poverty Alleviation in South Africa

JICA s Position Paper on SDGs: Goal 10

Analysis of the Sources and Uses of Remittance by Rural Households for Agricultural Purposes in Enugu State, Nigeria

Concluding observations on the combined seventeenth to nineteenth periodic reports of the Republic of Korea *

MARIKANA AND ITS IMPLICATIONS FOR INDUSTRIAL RELATIONS

Investing in Equality for Working Poor Women

Economic benefits of gender equality in the EU

Transcription:

The Informalisation of Work: Illegal & Informal Mining from a Gender Perspective By Janet Munakamwe PhD Candidate, African Centre for Migration & Society University of Witwatersrand Funded by the International Centre for Development & Decent Work (ICDD) (Photos by Alexia Webster)

Introduction The research examined the issue of cross-border migration, with particular reference to the working lives and career aspirations of women and men who are finding a livelihood by working informally in abandoned and closed mines in Johannesburg, South Africa. Informal mining is rooted in the political economy of migration & mining and those at the bottom end of this practice are precarious locals and migrants struggling to make a living N.B. It is important to point out that 'criminalisation' and illegality here is based on the mineral which is mined - in this case gold and also space where operations take place.

An overview of the mining sector in SA Mining -significant contributor to SA economy 500 000 direct jobs and 800 000 indirect = 1.3 million jobs (Chamber of Mines 2014) Contributes 16% towards national GDP; 8.2 directly and rest through multiplier effects, e.g. Investments, export earnings, taxes, procurement etc (ibid) Approximately, 2 or more billion rands/ annum are lost to the national economy through illegal mining of which if decriminalised, the national economy would benefit (Akua & Ingrid, 2014)[large corporates involved at the upper end of the commodity chain] 70% of arrested illegal miners are illegal immigrants (CoM 2014)[bureacratic immigration policies] Demographics: strong presence of women and children in IM; few men visible at the plant as many go underground and usually work at night

Objectives The presentation attempts to provide an understanding of women engaging in informal mining; their livelihood strategies, experiences, associated dangers and challenges in their everyday working lives from a broader perspective of the sector. To understand why people would return to what became known as the bloody shaft in reference to those that died, knowing the dangers associated with it. To interrogate the law as the major barrier to formalisation of small-scale informal miners & and how it criminalises them

A criminal activity or livelihood strategy My study demonstrates that informal mining emerged mainly due to the following: a direct loss of formal employment in mining for thousands of both local & foreign workers; rising unemployment and poverty in South Africa; a narrowing of formal channels of entry, stay and work in South Africa for regional migrants; and finally a broader discourse of nationalism and xenophobia (Landau 2012). Together, these conditions shape the emergence and rise of informal mining as a survival strategy for the urban poor and migrants which is often poorly understood as a livelihood activity and instead criminalised and policed excessively.

Background 2011, forty miners died at an illegal mining shaft in the old mining town of Springs, east of Johannesburg. In 2013 a pregnant woman Mary collapsed and suffered a miscarriage whilst running away from police In 2013, another nineteen miners died at an illegal shaft ZM. A volcano errupted at ZM and the bodies were cooked and charred beyond recognition. The mine was later sealed with the dead bodies inside. In February of 2014, twenty five illegal miners died at Mag shaft in Roodeport, west of Johannesburg. Their colleagues volunteered to retrieve the bodies from underground to ensure a dignified burial for the dead miners. One cross-border woman was among those who died

Methodology Ethnographic in nature, including direct observations and in-depth interviews with participants and key players in the illegal gold mining value chain. Ethnography (observations and shadowing since 2013 [see www.miworc.org.za] 12 Key informant interviews (union, Business, buyers) + 40 indepth interviews with participants Research site: Durban Deep, Braamfischer, Westrand, Johannesburg

Theoretical Framework Informal economy define informal mining as part of the informal economy which according to Chen (2002: 4) consists of all forms of informal employment that is, unregulated employment without labour or social protection both inside and outside informal enter- prises, including both self-employment in small unregistered enterprises and wage employment in unprotected jobs. the synergy between the informal and formal (structuralist perspective - Caroline Moser; Alexandra Portes and Castells, in the late 1970s and 1980s) My findings show that Chen s definition more appropriately characterize this sector Social Closure (Max Weber) which refers to the processes by which the access of certain social groups to various resources is granted or refused [ in this study, this refers to the exclusion and criminalisation of the poor at the expense of big businesses]

Challenges & Experiences of Women in ASM Police Brutality & police robbery Human trafficking and sometimes forced marriages Underground forced labour or slavery Taboos & beliefs associated with women going underground Health and safety issues Reproductive health problems [e.g miscariages,still birth] No workplace child care facilities Gender division of labour/problems and diseases Violence e.g. turf wars, rape (underground) Mine accidents, closures and fines

Potential Benefits Female breadwinners (earn at least ZAR 100/ day or more (mutaka) meaning sand tribute Women to some extent have become assertive & in control of their lives in particular cross-border migrants Easy to enter unlike in the formal sector While dangerous, women can still take their babies and toddlers to their workplaces Intuitive skills earning and transfer

Opportunities to promote gender responsive policy & practice in mining Generally, there is no clear policy or legislation to deal with informal mining in SA (see Precious Minerals Act of 1927) The DMR has established a Directorate of Small-Scale Mining to regulate the sector but with little progress Need to revisit the Mineral and Petroleum Resources Development Act (MPRDA) of 2002 to incorporate IM The 2004 Mining Charter - lack of progress in redressing the historical inequality and exclusion, due to a lack of clear targets and oversight mechanisms Favourable policies which translate IM into artisanal mining like what has occured in Zimbabwe, Tanzania & Ghana could be developed partly to create jobs and alleviate poverty including decriminalisation

Best Practice Models The cases of Ghana (see Debra et al) Zimbabwe & Tanzania (see Zvarivadza 2014)

Possible initiatives The law poses as a major barrier and exposes miners in particular women working in the sector to human rights abuses in the hands of law enforcers Depth of SA mines in relation to ASM any possibilities? Need for a further regional collaborative research to investigate possibilities of translating the criminalised informal mining in South Africa into artisanal mining. Parallels can be drawn from other countries based on empirical evidence N.B. Artisanal mining involving (not so valuable) minerals like sand, clay already taking place in South Africa.

Conclusion Key players in the mining industry to explore ways in which a vibrant & small-scale mining industry could be stablished in SA based on the number of abandoned mines (formalisation) If formalised, workers like Maria, working under precarious conditions will be protected ASM proves to benefit the majority other than big business only Macro-economic policies need to respond to people s daily needs and at the same time, stimulate job creation [big business more focused on financialisation and cutting down employment opprtunities] The formal sector could harness the elementary technical skills acquired through the IM sector

THANK YOU