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The Ban on Illegal Mining in Ghana: Environmental and Socio-Economic Effect on Local Communities

Dr. Annan, Stephen Twumasi
Lecturer
  0244068486
  stannan@uew.edu.gh
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Authors
Annan, S. T.
Publication Year
2024
Article Title
The Ban on Illegal Mining in Ghana: Environmental and Socio-Economic Effect on Local Communities
Journal
Journal of Geoscience and Environment Protection
Volume
2024, 12, 153-162
Issue Number
ISSN Online: 2327-4344
Page Numbers
153-162
ISSN
ISSN Print: 2327-4336
Abstract

The study was conducted to assess the effects of small-scale (artisanal) gold mining and its social and economic implications on the people in Amansie West District of Ghana. The artisanal gold mining communities were studied using secondary data from scholarly articles and journals, books, conference papers, research reports, policy documents, working papers, and briefs. Descriptive and systematic analyses were conducted. The result indicated that youth aged between 21 - 30 were most likely to engage in illegal mining operations in the selected study areas. The study revealed that farmland had been destroyed, making farming difficult for the inhabitants. It is evident from the review that dug-out pits from mining serve as breeding grounds for mosquitoes and death traps for humans. The study, therefore, accentuates the need for illegal small-scale gold mining to be formalised and strategic interventions and policies proposed for the protection of Ghana’s Natural resources. Furthermore, community members should be involved in policy-making and environmental protection issues to help control the menace of landscape destruction. Although the ban on illegal gold mining activity by the government has caused more people to lose their jobs leading to livelihood challenges in mining communities, it is a step in the right direction, as the ban seeks to halt and check the illegal small-scale mining sector. The study recommended alternative livelihood and income-generating projects such as beekeeping, mushroom culture, grasscutter rearing, and agroforestry technologies including the growth of economic fruit trees as alternative livelihood ventures.

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