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| Title | RIGHTING RESOURCE-CURSE WRONGS IN UGANDA: THE CASE OF OIL DISCOVERY AND THE MANAGEMENT OF POPULAR EXPECTATIONS | Author | JULIUS KIIZA ; LAWRENCE BATEGEKA; SARAH SSEWANYANA | Subject | Natural Resources | Date of Publication | 2011 | Publisher | Economic Policy Research Centre (EPRC) | Number of Pages | 36 pages | Language | English | Geographical Coverage | Uganda | Keywords | Oil Exploration | Abstract | This 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. | Copyright Holder | Economic Policy Research Centre (EPRC) | Copyright URL | http://www.eprc.or.ug | Filesize | 293401 MB | File Format | PDF | [ View / download original document ] |
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