Résumé
Since the rise of the gold price in 2000, artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM) is
a growing economic activity in developing countries. It represents a source of income for
several millions of people in West Africa. Exploitation techniques have evolved from traditional
gold panning to mechanization and use of chemical products that are harmful for
the environment. Government strategies to control and regulate this activity are impeded
by the difficulties to collect spatial information, due to the remote location and the mobile
and informal natural of ASGM. Here we present and discuss the value of remote sensing
techniques to complement the knowledge on artisanal mining impacts, including for detection
of illegal sites, the evaluation of the degradation of soils and waters, the deforestation
and the monitoring of expansion of ASGM with time. However, these techniques are blind
regarding gender issues, labor relations, mobility, migration, and insecurity and need to be
considered with knowledges from other disciplines. Remote sensing is also instilled with various powers accruing to those enabled to produce and interpret these data. Remote sensing
should be therefore used in a reflexive manner that accounts for the social, ethical and
political implications of ASGM governance informed by space observations.