“…It is beyond the scope of this paper to delve into the details about why this is the case but in most instances, it is -to elaborate on points raised in the previous section of this paper -due to a combination of bureaucratic registration processes and costly licensing fees, which confine most of the region's ASM operators to the informal economy. Examples include Ghana, where miners must pay thousands of US dollars in license and environmental permit fees (Hilson et al, 2016;Hilson and Maconachie, 2017); Liberia, where, in order to use machinery, individuals must obtain a Class B License, which requires payment of a US$5000 fee, renewable annually (Hinton et al, 2010;Van Bockstael, 2014); and Zimbabwe, where achieving compliance with technical specifications and bureaucratic processes associated with registration and licensing can take many years (Spiegel, 2012(Spiegel, , 2015. There is the added difficulty of securing viable plots in a rent-seeking 'space' controlled by host governments: in many countries in sub-Saharan Africa, and other areas of the developing world for that matter, vast sections of land have been demarcated to multinational mining and mineral exploration companies in exchange for royalties, taxes and other miscellaneous payments.…”