Large-Scale Land Acquisition in Ghana

£20.99

Large-Scale Land Acquisition in Ghana

Institutional Change, Gender and Power

Regional / International studies Development studies Comparative politics Development economics and emerging economies Agribusiness and primary industries Environmentalist thought and ideology Environmental policy and protocols Environmental management Social impact of environmental issues Agricultural science

Author: Kristina Lanz

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Collection: Routledge Studies in Global Land and Resource Grabbing

Language: English

Published by: Routledge

Published on: 27th April 2022

Format: LCP-protected ePub

Size: 4 Mb

ISBN: 9781000581140


Overview

This book examines a large-scale land acquisition project for rice production in Ghana’s Volta Region, which has been purported by some to be a social and ecological showcase of a company entering a "community–private partnership" with affected communities.

Media and Funding

Celebrated by national and international media, the project has received substantial amounts of funding from various donor organisations and claims to empower women through its much-lauded outgrower project. Although discourses of "development", "sustainability" and "women’s empowerment" are used by the investment company, the state and the customary authorities to legitimise the large-scale land acquisition, this book highlights how the deal benefits mainly the powerful elite, including elite women, and generally increases the depreciation of those already most marginalised, such as poor female-headed households and settler communities that were dependent on resources from the commons now enclosed and transformed into a rice farm.

Theoretical Perspective

The author adopts a New Institutionalist perspective in social anthropology in order to analyse how this land acquisition has been implemented in a plural institutional context and how different actors use different rules and regulations and associated legitimating discourses to increase their bargaining power and to pursue their own interests in a changing legal context. In addition, this perspective shows how benefits and losses are distributed along different intersecting axes of power, such as class, gender, clan membership and age. By focusing on power, gender and legitimisation strategies in the context of institutional change caused by the large-scale land acquisition, this book fills a gap in the literature on large-scale land acquisitions while contributing to the development of a theoretical perspective on institutional change, power relations and ideological legitimisation.

Target Audience

This book will be of great interest to students and scholars of land and resource grabbing, agricultural development and agribusiness, land management and development studies more broadly.

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