Sahrawi refugees and the Sahrawi state-in-exile have sought to assert their claims to Western Sahara, Africa’s last colony, while exiled in refugee camps in Algeria. Through an examination of the Sahrawi state’s use of deferred natural resource contracts, this article explores Sahrawi political action prior to – and in anticipation of – the referendum on self-determination.

© 2025, Journal of the Royal Anthropological Institute (Vol. 31, N°2)

Randi Irwin suggest that Sahrawi-led natural resource contracts operate as a technical financial device that constructs property and enables political action in the anticipation of sovereignty. Through these contracts, the state works to simultaneously produce both itself and its sovereignty. This article explores the new political and economic forms generated by these contracts, which subsequently create a political terrain by which otherwise inaccessible, seemingly off-limits, resources become productive spaces of opportunity for the development and exercise of sovereignty in the present.

  • Title : Selling the future state: making property for Sahrawi sovereignty in Western Sahara
  • Author : Randi Irwin
  • Editor : Royal Anthropological Institute
  • Date of publication : June 2025
  • Pages : 335-352
  • DOI : https://doi.org/10.1111/1467-9655.14204