ACBF Virtual Library

original document [ Voir document original ]

TitreRIGHTING RESOURCE-CURSE WRONGS IN UGANDA: THE CASE OF OIL DISCOVERY AND THE MANAGEMENT OF POPULAR EXPECTATIONS
AuteurJULIUS KIIZA ; LAWRENCE BATEGEKA; SARAH SSEWANYANA
ThèmeNatural Resources
Date de publication2011
ÉditeurEconomic Policy Research Centre (EPRC)
Nombre de pages36 pages
LangueEnglish
Couverture géographiqueUganda
Mots clésOil Exploration
RésuméThis paper discusses the management of expectations associated with the recent discovery of commercializable oil in Uganda. Our motivation is simultaneously theoretical and pragmatic. Theoretically, resource abundance oftentimes begets a natural resource-curse, that is, the tendency for resource-rich countries to attain poorer developmental outcomes than resourcepoor countries (Auty, 1993; Collier et al, 2004). Practically, oil development in Uganda appears set to create winners and losers. Four categories of winners are spelt out in Uganda’s Oil and Gas Policy – the central government; the oil companies; the district local governments of the oilrich areas; and the land owners. The oil-rich lands have not been nationalized to make all Ugandans winners. Bunyoro-Kitara Kingdom (hereafter: ‘Bunyoro Kingdom’) also complains that it has been left out. Yet, it has a historical and cultural claim over the oil-rich lands. Sections of the local community, whose environment could be contaminated by oil-spills, are also concerned that no context-specific environmental safeguards have been developed.
Détenteur du copyrightEconomic Policy Research Centre (EPRC)
Copyright URLhttp://www.eprc.or.ug
Taille du fichier293401 MB
Format du fichierPDF
[ Voir/télécharger document ]

Consulter le médiathécaire 942 documents, last updated Fri Apr 26, 2024
© 2015 Fondation pour le renforcement des capacités en Afrique| Tous droits réservés. ISSN: 2310-7960