“…In ASM, such exclusion is most visible through the undifferentiated stereotyping of artisanal miners as social and environmental criminals enmeshed in spheres of illegality (e.g., Fisher, 2007;Hilson, 2013;Hilson & Potter, 2005;Tschakert & Singha, 2007). In Ghana, informal and unregistered artisanal and small-scale miners, known and branded as galamsey operators (Armah, Luginahh, Taabazuing, & Odoi, 2013), have been repeatedly accused of pilfering gold, disturbing and degrading landscapes without environmental rehabilitation, disrupting social life due to drug and alcohol usage and prostitutes, and contributing to the militarization and influx of fire arms into the mining sector. In public and policy discourses and in the media, an anti-galamsey rhetoric portrays these unregistered local miners typically as ''threat", ''menace", ''headache", and ''reckless environmental polluters", requiring a ''lasting solution" (Hilson, 2013;Tschakert, 2009).…”