'Let Us Care for Everyone's Home': The Catholic Church's Role in Keeping Gold Mining Out of El Salvador

32 Pages Posted: 23 Dec 2015 Last revised: 7 Jan 2016

Date Written: December 2015

Abstract

El Salvador’s refusal to allow industrial gold mining within its borders sets it apart from most other Latin American countries. Since 2007, three successive presidents from opposing parties have maintained a de facto moratorium that prevents all mining firms – international and Salvadoran, public and private – from accessing El Salvador’s estimated 1.4 million ounces of gold deposits. A majority of Salvadoran citizens and political leaders alike are opposed to mining, citing the country’s environmental degradation, population density, and limited water resources. Yet opposition to industrial gold mining has not always been the majority position in El Salvador. As recently as the early 2000s, the Salvadoran government, with support from international donors and creditors, pursued metals mining as an opportunity for economic growth. The story of how El Salvador diverged from this extractivist path is multi-faceted. A key element has been the strategic involvement of the Salvadoran Catholic Church. This working paper explores the Church’s influence on the Salvadoran government’s decision to suspend all metals mining. The analysis examines the theological and practical motivations for the Church’s stance on mining. It also describes the strategic actions taken by the Church to promote its position. Ultimately, the involvement of the Catholic Church served to strengthen the grassroots anti-mining movement, to shape the public debate, and to sway the electorate, which proved decisive in the suspension of all industrial metals mining in this country.

Keywords: El Salvador, mining, extractive industries, gold mining, Catholic Church, anti-mining, metals mining, Central America, religious advocacy

Suggested Citation

Nadelman, Rachel, 'Let Us Care for Everyone's Home': The Catholic Church's Role in Keeping Gold Mining Out of El Salvador (December 2015). CLALS Working Paper Series No. 9, Available at SSRN: https://ssrn.com/abstract=2706819 or http://dx.doi.org/10.2139/ssrn.2706819

Rachel Nadelman (Contact Author)

Accountability Research Center ( email )

4400 Massachusetts Ave, NW
Washington, DC
United States

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