Vicente, PedroRuzzante, Matteo2017-12-142017-12-142017-06-08http://hdl.handle.net/10362/26851We examine the e ect of natural resources on the social and political fabric of lowincome communities. We combine geospatial data on mining activity with household surveys we conducted in Northern Mozambique. We nd that mines decrease the level of trust, especially in neighbors, local and national leaders. In the same direction, households living in mining areas contribute less to public goods. A signi cant negative e ect on participation to local community groups only emerges when using matching methods. On the political side, mineral endowments lead to institutional degradation in the form of lower level of democratic decision-making in the community, lower preference for democratic decisions by the households and increased corruption in the allocation of public funds, which suggest rent-seeking behavior of both the political elite and the population. We also document weak evidence of violence within and around mining areas. These results unveil the presence of both social and political mechanisms behind the natural resource curse and call for carefully monitoring the ongoing expansion of the extractive industries in Africa.engpolitical economyNatural resourcesResource curseMinestrustRent-seekingMozambiqueAfricaBeware of the mine! the political economy of mines in Northern Mozambiquemaster thesis201753456