Land, Gender, and Class Relations in Ghana’s Cassava Frontier
Date
2021
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
SAGE
Abstract
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 pro mote large-scale industrial cassava production in rural areas. This arti cle 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.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Ghana, land grabbing, agricultural production, women, migrants