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West African ‘Stone Boys’ in the Ibadan Mining Frontiers Since the 1990s

In the last two decades of the 20th century, the city of Ibadan, capital of Oyo state, Nigeria hosted migrant entrepreneurs, “stone boys "from the West African sub-region who were actively involved in the export of gemstones. This paper drew on fieldwork to explicate how culture of migration, preval...

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Published: 2014
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LEADER 00000njm a2000000a 4500
001 oai:repository.ui.edu.ng:123456789/3442
042 |a dc 
720 |a Olaniyi, R.O  |e author 
260 |c 2014 
520 |a In the last two decades of the 20th century, the city of Ibadan, capital of Oyo state, Nigeria hosted migrant entrepreneurs, “stone boys "from the West African sub-region who were actively involved in the export of gemstones. This paper drew on fieldwork to explicate how culture of migration, prevalent among West Africans, intertwined with entrepreneurship in the international gemstones trade and its implications on the Nigerian economy. It argued that gemstones trade among West African m igrants was an inherited commercial heritage. It further advanced that lack of government investment in the non-oil solid mineral sector provided a leewayfor artisanal miners and unregulated export of gemstones; and social solidarity and identity empowered the migrants to dominate the export of gemstones. 
024 8 |a 1597-5207 
024 8 |a Ibadan Journal of Social Science 12(2) pp. 221-235 
024 8 |a ui_art_olaniyi_west_2014 
024 8 |a http://ir.library.ui.edu.ng/handle/123456789/3442 
245 0 0 |a West African ‘Stone Boys’ in the Ibadan Mining Frontiers Since the 1990s