IC 6716 Mining Laws Of French Equatorial Africa, West Africa, Cameroun, And Togo ? Foreword

The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Paul M. Tyler
Organization:
The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH)
Pages:
13
File Size:
5632 KB
Publication Date:
Jan 1, 1933

Abstract

[This paper presents one of a series of digests of foreign mining legislation and court decisions which is being prepared in advance of a general report relative to the rights of American citizens to explore for minerals and to own and operate mines in various foreign countries. This interpretation of the mining laws of specified French possessions in Africa has been prepared from the best information available in Washington, but is released subject to correction and amplification, if necessary, by the proper American diplomatic and consular officers, to whom it is being referred through the courtesy of the Department of State. France controls large areas on the African continent, but the various Colonies and Dependencies are administered more or less independently. Algeria is under the direct jurisdiction of the Ministry of the Interior, and its mining laws are essentially the same as those of the mother country. Tunis and Morocco are attached to the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; separate digests of the mining laws' of these respective colonies have already been prepared by the United States Bureau of Mines. The present paper covers all other French territory on the continent of Africa except Somaliland, a rather small Colony including the port of Djibouti near the point where the Red Sea joins the Gulf of Aden. Available information indicates that the prospects of mineral production in this Colony, apart from salt and gypsum, are not at all encouraging.3]
Citation

APA: Paul M. Tyler  (1933)  IC 6716 Mining Laws Of French Equatorial Africa, West Africa, Cameroun, And Togo ? Foreword

MLA: Paul M. Tyler IC 6716 Mining Laws Of French Equatorial Africa, West Africa, Cameroun, And Togo ? Foreword. The National Institute for Occupational Safety and Health (NIOSH), 1933.

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