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Regionalism and Public Policy in Northern Ghana

by Yakubu Saaka (Volume editor)
©2001 Textbook XI, 242 Pages
Series: Society and Politics in Africa, Volume 10

Summary

Arguably the most marginalized of all the regions of Ghana, Northern Ghana, while accounting for only 20% of the national population, is home to over 80% of the poorest tenth of that population. Its main contribution to the national economy is unskilled labor. The critical essays assembled in this collection explain how the region acquired this status and why its underdevelopment persists. The contributors trace the genesis of this unfortunate situation in the North to the pattern of neglect set by policymakers in the early colonial period.

Details

Pages
XI, 242
Year
2001
ISBN (Softcover)
9780820451459
Language
English
Keywords
Population Economy Underdevelopment Unskilled labor
Published
New York, Bern, Berlin, Bruxelles, Frankfurt/M., Oxford, Wien, 2001. XI, 242 pp., num. tables

Biographical notes

Yakubu Saaka (Volume editor)

The Editor: Yakubu Saaka, former Deputy Foreign Minister of Ghana, is Professor of African American Studies at Oberlin College in Oberlin, Ohio. He has published extensively on African politics, including Local Government and Political Change in Northern Ghana. He is also coeditor of Challenging Hierarchies: Issues and Themes in Colonial and Postcolonial African Literature (Peter Lang, 1998).

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Title: Regionalism and Public Policy in Northern Ghana