About the Course
Many governments and development partners want to demonstrate credible progress on artisanal and small-scale mining formalisation, but often lack a coherent, sequenced approach that miners can realistically follow. You are expected to design or influence policies that improve licensing uptake, reduce environmental damage, address mercury use in artisanal and small-scale gold mining (ASGM), professionalize mine-site management, and connect ASM to legal markets, while also integrating human rights, gender equality, and climate considerations. Formalization of ASM is a multi-step governance process that integrates the sector into the formal economy, society, and regulatory system through land allocation, fit-for-purpose licensing, miners’ organizations, progressive mine-site standards, and accessible support mechanisms informed by frameworks such as the IGF ASM guidance and the UNITAR / UNEP ASGM Formalization Handbook.
This advanced Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining Formalisation Training helps you convert scattered lessons from reports, pilots, and field visits into a practical system for diagnosis, strategy design, and phased implementation. You build competencies in applying IGF’s formalization dimensions, using the World Bank’s ASM legitimacy and professionalization pillars, mapping ASM value chains, designing licensing and cadastral solutions, structuring extension and support services, integrating gender and livelihoods safeguards, and planning mine-site improvements aligned with environmental and health standards, including mercury reduction guidance from the Minamata Convention context. In simple terms, you learn how to diagnose the current ASM landscape, prioritize formalization interventions, draft realistic measures and support instruments, and set up monitoring indicators. You will practice hands-on design of instruments such as licensing pathways, cooperatives support packages, and progressive compliance ladders, while topics such as digital cadastre, traceability, and remote monitoring are covered at operational awareness level so you can commission and oversee their use rather than engineer them yourself.
The course is built for professionals who must deliver change under constraints: limited budgets, complex political economies, fragmented institutions, and diverse ASM sub-sectors including gold, construction materials, and critical minerals. Every tool, template, and case example is calibrated for these realities, focusing on what can be implemented with existing agencies, local governments, and miner organizations, and highlighting where partnerships with technical agencies, development partners, and civil society can extend your reach without overloading your mandate.
Target Audience
This advanced programme is tailored for professionals who already work with artisanal and small-scale mining and need to design, influence, or implement formalization strategies at scale.
- ASM formalization program manager responsible for national or regional initiatives
- Mining cadastre and licensing officer overseeing small-scale mineral rights allocation
- Artisanal and small-scale mining policy advisor drafting regulatory reforms
- Mining and quarrying inspector supervising ASM mine-site compliance
- Environmental and social specialist focused on ASM-related impacts and mitigation
- Mineral value chain and market development specialist engaging ASM producers and traders
- Local government mining officer coordinating land use and ASM permits
- Civil society or NGO ASM coordinator leading field-based support and advocacy
- Development partner task team leader designing ASM technical assistance projects
- Mining association or cooperative federation leader structuring services for ASM members
Course Objectives
This course equips you to design, execute, and measure artisanal and small-scale mining formalisation initiatives that increase legal compliance, improve environmental and social performance, and align ASM development with broader economic and governance goals.
- Analyze national ASM contexts using the IGF formalization framework and World Bank ASM pillars.
- Assess existing ASM licensing, cadastral, and land allocation systems against formalization objectives.
- Design practical ASM licensing pathways and progressive compliance ladders for priority commodities.
- Develop organizational strengthening plans for ASM cooperatives and associations using capacity assessment tools.
- Evaluate environmental and health risks at ASM sites using Minamata-aligned mercury and mine-site standards.
- Implement data-driven monitoring using simple ASM indicators, digital registries, and mapping tools.
- Map ASM value chains and market channels to identify leverage points for formal trade integration.
- Synthesize findings into a phased ASM formalisation roadmap with measurable targets and responsibilities.
Requirements & Prerequisites
This is an advanced-level course. You should have at least 5 years of experience in mining governance, mineral sector policy, ASM programming, or related fields. You need a working understanding of mining licensing processes, environmental and social impact management concepts, and how public institutions function in the mineral sector. No coding or geospatial scripting is required, but you should be comfortable interpreting simple maps, basic datasets, and policy documents. The course treats advanced concepts such as remote-sensing-based site identification, digital cadastres, and traceability systems at the level of operational application so that you can commission, interpret, and govern their use, not technically engineer them.
Professional and Organizational Impact
When you lead artisanal and small-scale mining formalisation with credible diagnostics, realistic policy instruments, and miner-informed strategies, you become a trusted driver of mineral governance improvement and inclusive sector development.
- Build advanced capability to structure multi-dimensional ASM formalisation programs.
- Gain confidence designing licensing schemes and compliance pathways ASM can realistically follow.
- Strengthen your ability to interpret IGF and World Bank ASM guidance in local contexts.
- Enhance credibility when advising leaders on trade-offs in ASM regulation and support.
- Develop practical skills to integrate gender, human rights, and livelihood safeguards in ASM reforms.
- Position yourself as a specialist in ASM governance, policy design, and implementation support.
- Expand your capacity to manage cross-institutional coordination among ministries, local governments, and ASM organizations.
Organizations that embed rigorous artisanal and small-scale mining formalisation practices into mineral sector governance reduce regulatory gaps, mitigate environmental and social risks, and strengthen revenue generation and legitimacy.
- Improve mining revenue collection through increased ASM licensing and production declaration.
- Reduce environmental liabilities by driving adoption of progressive ASM mine-site standards.
- Lower conflict and insecurity risks in ASM areas via clearer rights and governance arrangements.
- Strengthen compliance with international expectations on mercury reduction and human rights in ASM.
- Enhance credibility in dialogues with development partners and investors on ASM governance reforms.
- Support inclusive local economic development by linking formalized ASM to legal markets and services.
- Build more coherent, coordinated ASM policies and programs across central and local institutions.
Training Methodology
This is a practical, outcome-driven course designed to turn high-level artisanal and small-scale mining formalisation aspirations into sequenced interventions, governance tools, and monitoring systems you can implement and defend.
Methodology includes:
- Hands-on diagnostics using an ASM formalization scorecard with IGF-based indicators and site-level datasets.
- Scenario simulation on redesigning an ASM licensing and cadastral system under real political and budget constraints.
- Structured assessment of existing ASM policies using a UNITAR / UNEP ASGM Formalization Handbook checklist.
- Stakeholder and responsibility mapping for ASM formalisation across ministries, local governments, and miner organizations.
- Case study analysis of ASM formalisation experiences from gold, construction materials, and critical minerals sectors.
- Group workshop to design a draft ASM formalisation roadmap, including licensing, support services, and standards.
- Evidence-based reflection using international ASM benchmarks to challenge current institutional practices and priorities.
Upcoming Sessions
Next available dates worldwide
No international sessions scheduled
Certification
Recognized credentials that advance your career
Participants who complete the Artisanal and Small-Scale Mining Formalisation Training Program earn a Trainingcred Certificate of Achievement, demonstrating professional competence and alignment with global standards in learning and development.
NITA Accredited
Accredited by the National Industrial Training Authority, ensuring programs meet nationally recognized standards of quality and relevance.
CPD Certified
Recognized by the CPD Certification Service, ensuring every program meets internationally benchmarked standards of professional excellence.
Why this course earns its place on your CV
Accredited training, practitioner trainers, and peers on the same career track — the three things real expertise is built on.
Effective Learning & Skill Development
- Build expertise with structured, outcome-driven learning.
- Equip individuals and teams with skills that grow with industry needs.
- Reinforce learning through real-world scenarios, case studies and practical exercises.
Career Growth & Professional Advancement
- Apply what you learn with a proven methodology that ensures lasting impact.
- Develop immediately usable skills that translate directly into workplace success.
- Gain the expertise needed for career advancement and leadership roles.
Training Optimization & Learning Excellence
- Tailor training to industry-specific challenges and organizational goals.
- Use data-driven insights and automation to enhance training effectiveness.
- Evaluate progress and ensure long-term learning success.























