THERE CAN BE few people in the extractive industries sector that have as much experience in handling socioeconomic issues as Rosalind Kainyah. After reading for a degree in English in Ghana, she went on to study law in London, UK, and was called to the English Bar. She started her career in the extractive industries sector as an environmental lawyer at Anglo American South Africa and then joined the law firm Linklaters as an environmental and corporate lawyer. She went on to De Beers, working within that company for seven years, the final two years setting up and running its US office, and after that to Tullow Oil, the Africa-focused hydrocarbons exploration company.
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