Political governance in Tamale, Northern Ghana, is complicated by the conflict between the two royal lineages within the traditional Dagbon state that culminated with the killing of the paramount chief in 2002. The major political parties have in turn politicized this division and thus contaminated the national government with the Dagbon political predicaments. The Ghanaian constitution amplifies this bifurcation through its winner-takes-all system that vests great power in the president. Based on ten months of ethnographic fieldwork, this article explores these entanglements by analyzing small-scale street and market traders’ relation to the political parties. Although politically interested and engaged, traders often find political partie...
Traditional authorities are powerful leaders alongside the state in Ghana. The chieftaincy has been ...
In Ghana historical and modern legal and political circumstances have contributed to violent conflic...
Street trading is ubiquitous in African cities, but despite research over the last 40 years, there h...
Political governance in Tamale, Northern Ghana, is complicated by the conflict between the two royal...
Over the past decade, the Ghanaian government has tried to include and accommodate the many people w...
This article focuses on three concerns: (1) the historical and contemporary distinctiveness of the '...
ABSTRACT This paper examines the chieftaincy succession conflict in Dagbon, Northern Ghana. It trace...
This paper studies political competition in the case of a democratization process.We present an illu...
The phenomenon of natural resource conflict has gained prominence in academic and policy literature,...
Rapid urbanization and political liberalization is changing the nature of African politics and socie...
For impoverished African states the attraction of inward flows of capital is vital and migrants are ...
How do cities build a social contract with their diverse constituencies and foster political trust a...
This paper seeks to explain puzzling differences in indigenous notions of citizenship and political ...
Research on the bi-directional relationship between political regimes and economic development has i...
This thesis analyses the potentiality of ethnic politics and violent conflicts in Ghana. It is a fac...
Traditional authorities are powerful leaders alongside the state in Ghana. The chieftaincy has been ...
In Ghana historical and modern legal and political circumstances have contributed to violent conflic...
Street trading is ubiquitous in African cities, but despite research over the last 40 years, there h...
Political governance in Tamale, Northern Ghana, is complicated by the conflict between the two royal...
Over the past decade, the Ghanaian government has tried to include and accommodate the many people w...
This article focuses on three concerns: (1) the historical and contemporary distinctiveness of the '...
ABSTRACT This paper examines the chieftaincy succession conflict in Dagbon, Northern Ghana. It trace...
This paper studies political competition in the case of a democratization process.We present an illu...
The phenomenon of natural resource conflict has gained prominence in academic and policy literature,...
Rapid urbanization and political liberalization is changing the nature of African politics and socie...
For impoverished African states the attraction of inward flows of capital is vital and migrants are ...
How do cities build a social contract with their diverse constituencies and foster political trust a...
This paper seeks to explain puzzling differences in indigenous notions of citizenship and political ...
Research on the bi-directional relationship between political regimes and economic development has i...
This thesis analyses the potentiality of ethnic politics and violent conflicts in Ghana. It is a fac...
Traditional authorities are powerful leaders alongside the state in Ghana. The chieftaincy has been ...
In Ghana historical and modern legal and political circumstances have contributed to violent conflic...
Street trading is ubiquitous in African cities, but despite research over the last 40 years, there h...