The Political Economy of enhancing children's rights through mineral rents : the case of Mongolia.

dc.contributor.authorCampbell B
dc.contributor.authorRoy-Grégoire E
dc.contributor.authorHatcher, Pascale
dc.date.accessioned2021-06-24T23:59:40Z
dc.date.available2021-06-24T23:59:40Z
dc.date.issued2016en
dc.date.updated2021-05-25T23:51:51Z
dc.description.abstractSummary Populated by predominantly young people, Mongolia’s economy has relied heavily in recent years on mining. After several years of boom, the recent decrease in mining rents has only emphasized the pressing need for linking mining revenues to continuing demands in social expenditure, especially in ways that promote the rights of the child. While geared at attracting foreign investors for large-scale mining activities, the more liberal norms adopted by Mongolia since its political transition may have hampered the implementation of a development model informed by a rights-based approach. Moreover, the particular set of norms driving Mongolia’s mining boom appears to be displacing, at least partially, the policy debates over the country’s mining governance to the transnational level. In turn, such trends seem to explain why local and national socio-environmental issues pertaining to the sector have at times been addressed in technocratic terms that cannot easily conform to a rights approach. The paper reviews the historical progression of the country’s mining regime and its contribution to government revenues, analyses the linkages between mining rent and social expenditure, focusing on children and the extractive sector’s ability/willingness to take account of children’s rights in the small-scale and artisanal mining (SSAM) sector. It concludes that Mongolia should establish a coherent long-term poverty reduction strategy that encompasses both the economic benefits and potential harm of extractive industries; strengthen socio-environmental regulation and enforcement capacity: ratify and apply international instruments regarding access to information, public participation in decision making, and access to justice in environmental matters: put in place effective prevention and remedy mechanisms for human rights abuses by private companies; and pursue its efforts towards the legalization, regulation and monitoring of SSAM using a rights-based approach.en
dc.identifier.citationHatcher P, Campbell B, Roy-Grégoire E (2016). The Political Economy of enhancing children's rights through mineral rents : the case of Mongolia. UNRISD Working Paper. Geneva. UNRISD.en
dc.identifier.urihttps://www.unrisd.org/unrisd/website/document.nsf/(httpPublications)/C61721AEC7C272CFC1257FF4003072F8?OpenDocument
dc.identifier.urihttps://hdl.handle.net/10092/102102
dc.language.isoen
dc.publisherUNRISDen
dc.rightsAll rights reserved unless otherwise stateden
dc.rights.urihttp://hdl.handle.net/10092/17651en
dc.subject.anzsrcFields of Research::44 - Human society::4407 - Policy and administration::440712 - Social policyen
dc.subject.anzsrcFields of Research::44 - Human society::4407 - Policy and administration::440703 - Economic development policyen
dc.subject.anzsrcFields of Research::44 - Human society::4404 - Development studies::440404 - Political economy and social changeen
dc.subject.anzsrcFields of Research::44 - Human society::4404 - Development studies::440403 - Labour, migration and developmenten
dc.subject.anzsrcFields of Research::44 - Human society::4404 - Development studies::440407 - Socio-economic developmenten
dc.subject.anzsrcFields of Research::48 - Law and legal studies::4807 - Public law::480703 - Domestic human rights lawen
dc.titleThe Political Economy of enhancing children's rights through mineral rents : the case of Mongolia.en
dc.title.alternativeThe Political Economy of Mineral Resource Governance and Children’s Rights: the Case of Mongolia.en
dc.typeDiscussion / Working Papersen
uc.collegeFaculty of Arts
uc.departmentLanguage, Social and Political Sciences
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