In this article, I examine human attempts to control water, and water’s inherent potential for disorder, by focusing on the Volta River and Akosombo Dam in Ghana. I suggest that, in regard to the work of Wittfogel, Kwame Nkrumah’s famous vision of Ghanaian nationalism and pan-African sovereignty was a kind of Wittfogelian reading of waterscapes as manipulated to facilitate political power. In the conception and construction of the massive Akosombo Dam in the traditional area of the Akwamu people in southern Ghana, Nkrumah attempted to reshape society through the control of water. Local Akwamu people have different visions about who can control water, how water can (or sometimes cannot) be controlled, and how deities are the most auth...
The current acute needs for improved water resources and energy management in the contemporary devel...
Low-income, peri-urban residents of Greater Accra face disparities in water access, particularly giv...
This historical analysis examines the forces that shaped the collection and use of geographical data...
This article explores Akwamu understandings of the Volta and other rivers in Ghana - valued for thei...
In this thesis, I analyse how flows of fluids and people shape each other in southern Ghana. They d...
The Akosombo dam in Ghana's Lower Volta River Basin provides essential economic benefits through hyd...
Water law in most developing countries is shaped by a combination of global and local influences tha...
My paper will explore the consequences of water privatization in Ghana to understand how colonial an...
Human interventions in the White Volta River in Ghana increase the flood risk in living spaces of th...
Paper presented at the ACP-EU Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA) Annual S...
Protecting access to water represents human dignity and remains the traditional right upon which oth...
This briefing paper presents the initial findings as well as the integrative approach of the project...
Drinking water remains inaccessible for approximately 783 million people globally – an increasing po...
A complex political economy revolves around shared land and water use between Kenyan Turkana and Uga...
The thesis presents a detailed ethnographic case study of a mining community in the Eastern region o...
The current acute needs for improved water resources and energy management in the contemporary devel...
Low-income, peri-urban residents of Greater Accra face disparities in water access, particularly giv...
This historical analysis examines the forces that shaped the collection and use of geographical data...
This article explores Akwamu understandings of the Volta and other rivers in Ghana - valued for thei...
In this thesis, I analyse how flows of fluids and people shape each other in southern Ghana. They d...
The Akosombo dam in Ghana's Lower Volta River Basin provides essential economic benefits through hyd...
Water law in most developing countries is shaped by a combination of global and local influences tha...
My paper will explore the consequences of water privatization in Ghana to understand how colonial an...
Human interventions in the White Volta River in Ghana increase the flood risk in living spaces of th...
Paper presented at the ACP-EU Technical Centre for Agricultural and Rural Cooperation (CTA) Annual S...
Protecting access to water represents human dignity and remains the traditional right upon which oth...
This briefing paper presents the initial findings as well as the integrative approach of the project...
Drinking water remains inaccessible for approximately 783 million people globally – an increasing po...
A complex political economy revolves around shared land and water use between Kenyan Turkana and Uga...
The thesis presents a detailed ethnographic case study of a mining community in the Eastern region o...
The current acute needs for improved water resources and energy management in the contemporary devel...
Low-income, peri-urban residents of Greater Accra face disparities in water access, particularly giv...
This historical analysis examines the forces that shaped the collection and use of geographical data...