The architecture of opacity: Zimbabwe's diamond industry and its lessons for the mineral-driven energy transition
This article examines the securitization of the Marange diamond industry in Zimbabwe, arguing that it represents a deliberate political strategy to engineer an “architecture of opacity” for regime survival and elite enrichment. By integrating securitization theory with concepts of the shadow state, we analyze how the ZANU-PF government resolved a legitimacy crisis by violently enclosing a national resource before turning it into a tool of political control. We find that this process was enacted through the militarization of the diamond fields, the formation of an unaccountable military-commercial complex, the creation of parallel fiscal structures that siphoned billions of dollars away from the national treasury, and the systematic subversion of all domestic and international accountability mechanisms. The consequences of this process have been catastrophic: massive revenue loss, gross human rights abuses, and the deep erosion of democratic institutions. We warn that the surging demand for critical minerals threatens to reproduce this exact architecture globally. Because opacity is actively produced rather than merely a reflection of a passive institutional deficit, conventional transparency prescriptions are, at best, inhibited from the start, or, at worst, serve to obfuscate socio-economic dispossession and political corruption further. Preventing a new era of ‘green’ extractivism requires moving beyond financial disclosures to challenge the coercive political-security structures built to undermine accountability from the outset.
Opacity, Zimbabwe, diamond, industry, mineral, energy transition, architecture of opacity, militarization, critical mineral
Marume, W., & Finn, B. M. (2026). The architecture of opacity: Zimbabwe’s diamond industry and its lessons for the mineral-driven energy transition. Resources Policy, 116, 105920. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.resourpol.2026.105920. CSS26-18.