Based on an ethnographic case study of northeast Ghana\u27s shea economy and highlighting the situation of the rural woman, this dissertation probes the implications of changing global markets and economic controls for local social institutions and the state. It focuses on the intersection of two transnational currents: the cultivation of new markets for tropical commodities by multi-national firms, and the implementation of international-financial-institution mandated market promotion policies. The analysis of the shea economy suggests that these two trends, even as they dictate national priorities and overtake state capacities, nonetheless strengthen state power. This is a result of novel forms of state collusion with newly established pr...
This article examines adaptation decision-making through a diversified livelihoods strategy that dis...
This paper examines the linkages between institutions, assets and the existing gender differentials ...
This thesis examines Ghana's failed attempt to develop in an interpretative model of a political eco...
In the era of rapid corporatisation and obsession with market-led growth, not much attention has bee...
The agency of women in most African countries is often affected by the socio-economic and political ...
Pre-colonial patterns of trade in West Africa included exchanges of shea in periodic local and regio...
In the twenty-first century, African farmers are still in the grips of economic stagnation and are b...
Using literature, official documents, interviews, and participant observation, several dimensions of...
This paper examines women’s contributions to Ghana’s economic growth and well-being. Data for the st...
Over the past decade, the Ghanaian government has tried to include and accommodate the many people w...
Historically, a woman\u27s traditional position in the home has conflicted with her ability to enter...
The shea tree is regarded as the most important economic tree in Northern Ghana. With the unreliabil...
The difficult position of women in Ghanian society lies both in structures that are manifested throu...
This paper contributes to the debate on peasant differentiation and market integration in the food s...
Thesis: Ph. D. in International Development Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Departm...
This article examines adaptation decision-making through a diversified livelihoods strategy that dis...
This paper examines the linkages between institutions, assets and the existing gender differentials ...
This thesis examines Ghana's failed attempt to develop in an interpretative model of a political eco...
In the era of rapid corporatisation and obsession with market-led growth, not much attention has bee...
The agency of women in most African countries is often affected by the socio-economic and political ...
Pre-colonial patterns of trade in West Africa included exchanges of shea in periodic local and regio...
In the twenty-first century, African farmers are still in the grips of economic stagnation and are b...
Using literature, official documents, interviews, and participant observation, several dimensions of...
This paper examines women’s contributions to Ghana’s economic growth and well-being. Data for the st...
Over the past decade, the Ghanaian government has tried to include and accommodate the many people w...
Historically, a woman\u27s traditional position in the home has conflicted with her ability to enter...
The shea tree is regarded as the most important economic tree in Northern Ghana. With the unreliabil...
The difficult position of women in Ghanian society lies both in structures that are manifested throu...
This paper contributes to the debate on peasant differentiation and market integration in the food s...
Thesis: Ph. D. in International Development Planning, Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Departm...
This article examines adaptation decision-making through a diversified livelihoods strategy that dis...
This paper examines the linkages between institutions, assets and the existing gender differentials ...
This thesis examines Ghana's failed attempt to develop in an interpretative model of a political eco...