Christoph N. Vogel Profile picture
Jul 8, 2022 20 tweets 11 min read Read on X
Kila kitu na wakati yake… 📚 My book, Conflict Minerals Inc. is out now with Hurst and Oxford University Press. Reviewers say it’s “lucid, compassionate and personal”, and a “devastating and essential reading.” Here is to a few pictures and key points... 🧵 Image
As the subtitle says, the book tells a story of war, profit and white saviourism in eastern #Congo. Through the prism of #ConflictMinerals, it looks at how violence, business and intervention intersect in what was once Eurocentrically called “Africa’s World War.” Image
In the book, I develop two main arguments: I explain how multiple factors, rather than just natural resources, have driven the wars in #Congo and, hence, I show that the struggle against #ConflictMinerals failed to stop violence but triggered a series of new problems. Image
Conflict Minerals Inc. addresses policymakers and practitioners as much as academics and the general public. It combines a decade of in-depth anthropological research with critical political and theoretical reflections informed by an “epistemic surrender” to widen our gaze. Image
Perhaps the most important misunderstanding in post-Cold War peacebuilding, the notion of “conflict minerals” emerged at the verge of the new millennium as UN and NGO reports pinpointed the militarised, illegal trade in coltan during a global price peak. Image
Yet, conflicts in the Great Lakes of Africa had been escalating since the early 1990s, as I trace in the historical chapters of the book. Extracting and trading minerals was and is just one among a host of options to generate revenue and finance armed conflict. Image
Recent studies of the Congolese conflicts show that taxation (see @peerschouten’s book) and forms of state capture (see @jasonkstearns’ book) form a broader basis of conflict financing than minerals – now and then. In this 2018 @AfrAfJournal piece, we made a similar point. Image
However, guided by unrepentant Western advocacy, the #ConflictMinerals paradigm was as efficient as it was misleading and depoliticizing conflict & agency. Linking child soldiers & victims of rape to the ever more ubiquitous cellphone, it forged a powerful Orientalist narrative. Image
Advocates used a feverishly neo-colonial approach, fronting diehard spin doctors alongside Western celebrities. Meanwhile in Congo, as a group of women rights activists told me once, there was little support to the causes defended by Congolese themselves.
Analytical shortcomings notwithstanding, conflict minerals advocates succeeded in driving laws and policies that engendered a deep restructuring of mineral markets in eastern Congo. Based on hundreds of interviews, my book investigates their impact. Image
While “conflict-free” sourcing has been hailed as a central solution to end violence in #Congo, recent data suggests a reverse correlation. Violent incidents and the number of armed groups steadily increased since and despite the onset of “conflict-free” mining. ImageImage
Juxtaposing @IPISResearch’s great research on mining with my work at @GEC_CRG and @KivuSecurity highlights that – as opposed to cruder speculations – there is no observable relation between mining and armed conflict. But let’s go step by step. ImageImage
The fight against conflict minerals relied, from its onset, on spurious hypotheses (Collier’s “greed theory”) as well as colonial frames that strongly resemble what Teju Cole and others have defined as “white saviourism,” i.e. an experience that validates privilege. Image
Since colonial times, Congo has been imagined and constructed as a space both empty and savage, allowing for violent extraction as much as justifying intervention with vocabularies as noble as peace, stability and development. The result is a perpetuation of structural violence. Image
As much as transnational industries reaped the benefits of a brief coltan peak (during the RCD rebellion in eastern #Congo around 2000), new laws and guidelines provided an opportunity for global tin and tantalum lobbies to kickstart a buyer-end monopoly around 2010. Image
How so? Tweaking OECD due diligence, global industries set up a “closed-pipeline” system to trace and certify “conflict minerals”. Yet, as older (@AJEnglish) and recent investigations (@Global_Witness) demonstrated, the reliability of these systems is depressingly low. Image
Rather than eliminating violence, corruption and contraband from supply chains, the fight against conflict minerals has resulted in monopoly, imposing prices on Congolese producers who pay the overwhelmingly majority of an inefficient certification to satisfy Western consumers. Image
All that raises questions on the violent continuities between the colonial past and the present but also on Congo’s place in the world, its entangled histories and connections – very much like Jean Bofane’s Congo Inc. to which the title of my book gives a nod. Image
For a sneak preview on parts of all this, check out the below @DissentMag essay I wrote a few months ago with Josaphat Musamba. We are currently working on a French version with the wonderful @AfriqueXXI, so stay tuned!

dissentmagazine.org/online_article…
Finally, tweets won’t suffice to thank everyone who helped me on this journey – you are just too many. Aksanti. To all others, don’t forget to (pre-)order the book at bit.ly/3ObqYBR (Europe/UK) or bit.ly/3QEjWXJ (Americas) or contact me if elsewhere. Image

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More from @ethuin

Feb 23
Unfortunately, Dr Mukwege is wrong on one important aspect here. As my @HurstPublishers @OUPAcademic book "Conflict Minerals Inc." demonstrates, three decades of war and violence in eastern #DRC are neither "mainly economic" nor is the exploitation of minerals a "root cause"...
Whatever perspective you choose to take, the link between minerals and conflict is much more circumstantial and correlative than it is causative. Illegal trade has existed before the wars began, and, after the wars had begun, minerals only eventually began playing a role in it.
As we know from eminent Congolese and international scholars – Vwakyanakazi, MacGaffey etc. – mineral contraband has been rampant from at least the 1970s in North Kivu, more precisely in Lubero, from where locally sourced gold is smuggled to Uganda. This is the case until today..
Read 12 tweets
Jul 8, 2023
🧵Many people I speak to compare the “new” conflict around M23 to the 2012 crisis, seeing it as yet another cycle in the same longer history of crises in eastern #Congo — especially foreigners but also people from the Great Lakes region. I am not sure whether that’s true…
There is, whoever you listen to, unarguably a long, persistent history of grievances and unsolved problems. Different people have different claims, and it’s not for me to judge who is right or wrong. On some aspects of the story, there probably isn’t really a right or wrong…
But one thing, and that’s what this particular thread is about, is most likely new. For 30 years, and probably longer depending on what you look at, there has not been a moment where all of eastern Congo has been at peace.
Read 20 tweets
Jun 15, 2022
In light of ongoing events, it is interesting to look at data. M23 doesn’t seem to be a major source of civilian deaths in eastern #Congo since its return 2017. This doesn’t mean it isn’t illegal and committing violations galore, but it may nuance the current polemic a bit. Image
Obviously, @KivuSecurity covers violence no longer than since its establishment in 2017. It does neither include M23’s first life, nor its predecessors CNDP and RCD. Many of the latter can be found in the @UNHumanRights Mapping Report, alongside a wealth of crimes by others.
What does that mean? Is M23 your sympathetic liberation army next door? Certainly not. Although some of their claims are valid, insurrection should not be carte blanche to harvest impunity (as other armed groups in the past). Some current M23 likely took part in Kiwanja 2008.
Read 10 tweets
Mar 19, 2021
#AcademicTwitter, there is a great tendency towards more transparency, reflection and inflection about publishing, process, success and failure in our work. This one, has been more failure than success for most of the time, so let me share a short story on this article. Thread...
This piece is based on the last of 5 substantive empirical chapters of my PhD that I wrote about 3 years ago. It's been in several ways the least intended and most haphazard chapter, but at the same time the most intriguing to research.
While some of my supervisors said it's the most important and useful chapter of my dissertation, draft versions of it were rejected by two journals before this final version ended up getting published. That process taught me about the uneven world of academic publishing...
Read 20 tweets

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