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C. Doss, G. Summerfield, D. Tsikata (2014)
Land, Gender, and Food SecurityFeminist Economics, 20
K. Amanor (2010)
Family Values, Land Sales and Agricultural Commodification in South-Eastern GhanaAfrica, 80
C. Park (2018)
“Our Lands are Our Lives”: Gendered Experiences of Resistance to Land Grabbing in Rural CambodiaFeminist Economics, 25
J. Yaro, J. Teye, Gertrude Torvikey (2018)
Historical Context of Agricultural Commercialisation in Ghana: Changes in Land and Labour RelationsJournal of Asian and African Studies, 53
D. Tsikata (2015)
The Social Relations of Agrarian Change
(2019)
The political economy of cassava production in Southeastern Ghana
D. Tsikata (2009)
Gender , Land and Labour Relations and Livelihoods in Sub-Saharan Africa in the era of Economic Liberalisation : Towards a Research Agenda
C. Park, M. Maffii (2017)
‘We are not afraid to die’: gender dynamics of agrarian change in Ratanakiri province, CambodiaThe Journal of Peasant Studies, 44
D. Tsikata (2016)
Gender, Land Tenure and Agrarian Production Systems in Sub-Saharan AfricaAgrarian South: Journal of Political Economy, 5
Tom Kumekpor (1974)
The position of maternal relatives in the kinship system of the Ewex
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Kinship and Marriage among the Anlo EweAfrica
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2. An Example of a 'Mixed' System of Descent and Inheritance, 55
B. O'Laughlin (2002)
Proletarianisation, Agency and Changing Rural Livelihoods: Forced Labour and Resistance in Colonial MozambiqueJournal of Southern African Studies, 28
Michael Kevane, L. Gray (1999)
A Woman's Field Is Made At Night: Gendered Land Rights And Norms In Burkina FasoFeminist Economics, 5
Lands for domestic production in rural areas have increasingly shrunk and the rules of access have changed as corporate land grabs intensify in many parts of the Global South. These occurrences are outcomes of processes that are packaged in state policies that promote market intervention in agricultural production. In Ghana, state initiatives promote large-scale industrial cassava production in rural areas. This article discusses land grabs in cassava frontier communities, their impacts on land access rules, and social relations. It is argued that while land, gender, and class relations change as a result of competition over, and commodification of, land resources, community institutions, namely chiefs and families, play significant roles that legitimize dispossession of social groups whose land-use rights are derived from other hierarchies. The changes in production relations in the communities are linked to processes linked to older commodity production. Similar changes have occurred at the household level as circuits of commodity production integrate within domestic production. The article highlights different struggles by women and migrants to renegotiate their access rules and their local citizenship status.
Agrarian South: Journal of Political Economy – SAGE
Published: Apr 1, 2021
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