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Depoliticisation and ahistoricism of transparency...
Journal article

Depoliticisation and ahistoricism of transparency and accountability via global norms: assessing the EITI in Ghana and Nigeria

Abstract

While extant assessments of the Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) have focused on institutional and regulatory regimes, such evaluations have largely tended to depoliticise institutions. This article argues that a more robust understanding of EITI processes must give central attention to historically situated political structures and power relations that continue to shape the present institutional quality/capacity of extractive industries' transparency, and EITI reforms. Assessing the EITI in Africa through the lens of historical institutionalism clarifies how global governance regimes interface with specific institutional pathways, state-corporation-civil society configurations, and historical legacies to produce outcomes that may complement or undermine intended reforms.

Authors

Andrews N; Okpanachi E

Journal

Commonwealth and Comparative Politics, Vol. 58, No. 2, pp. 228–249

Publisher

Taylor & Francis

Publication Date

April 2, 2020

DOI

10.1080/14662043.2020.1735088

ISSN

1466-2043

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