| In the late twentieth century, many governments treated resource security as a question of fuel and shipping lanes. In the twenty-first century, the pressure point is often a laboratory-grade separation line, a qualification certificate, or a specialised factory that turns powders into magnets. Rare earths sit at the centre of this shift: not because the elements are mythically scarce, but because modern economies have organised themselves around a few fragile steps where disruption travels faster than policy can respond. Mineral Mandate argues that rare earths are best understood as a strategic supply problem, not a mining story. Following the chain from ore to oxides, metals, and components, Tarek Omraneh shows how supply chain bottlenecks form, why processing and magnet-making carry more leverage than reserves, and how states use export controls and other administrative tools to influence outcomes without open conflict. The book examines the political economy of low-margin yet high-importance industries, the role of industrial policy in sustaining capacity through price cycles, and the practical limits of substitution, thrift, and stockpiling when engineering timelines and standards regimes slow change. Written for students, general readers, and policy and industry analysts, the book offers a decision framework for strategic dependency mapping that goes beyond headlines. Readers will come away able to identify where vulnerability actually sits in a specific supply chain, which actors carry the incentives to invest (or not), and which resilience measures shift bargaining power rather than merely shift costs. The result is a clearer view of how material interdependence becomes leverage, and what it takes to build resilience without illusion. |
Mineral Mandate: Rare Earths and the New Resource Hierarchy
Hardback | 9789377945848 | 334pp
Paperback | 9789377940454 | 334ppTarek Omraneh
















