New Working Paper: Critical Minerals & Resource Nationalism 2.0: Why the Policy is more Critical than the Mineral

11 views
Skip to first unread message

Thea Riofrancos

unread,
Sep 11, 2025, 11:42:04 AM (7 days ago) Sep 11
to GEP-Ed List
Hi All,

I am writing to share a new working paper, co-authored with Amir Lebdioui, "Critical Minerals & Resource Nationalism 2.0: Why the Policy is more Critical than the Mineral". The paper will also be published soon as a chapter in the Handbook of Resource Nationalism, edited by Jesse Ovadia, Jewellord Nem Singh, and Richard Saunders and published by Edward Elgar Publishing. In addition, we will soon have translations in Spanish and French. Abstract and link to PDF below.

“Critical minerals” are driving a new wave of resource nationalism around the globe. But to what extent is the current approach to critical minerals aligned with the achievement of long-term developmental goals? How novel are the policies currently implemented, and to what extent do they replicate previous extractivist patterns, including environmental devastation? For whom are the minerals critical, and for how long?

This paper provides a comprehensive examination of the role of critical minerals in driving resource nationalism, drawing lessons from different illustrative cases to highlight the opportunities and challenges facing a renewed resource-based development agenda in the 21st century. It highlights some of the common policy tools witnessed around the globe before highlighting some of the risks, common misconceptions, and factors of success.

We argue that, although nations should strive to gain sovereign control over their natural resources, considerable risks exist in attempts to leverage mineral abundance for socio-economic development. Strong technological foresight capabilities, inclusive social governance, robust environmental regulations, and a careful coordination of critical minerals strategy within a broad, sustainable, and equitable industrial policy are critical for long-term success.

Warmly,
Thea Riofrancos
--
Thea Riofrancos (she/her)

Associate Professor of Political Science, Providence College
Strategic Co-Director, Climate and Community Institute

Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages