Youth and Social Navigation in the Alavanyo and Nkonya Land Conflict in Ghana
Loading...
Date
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Nordic Journal of African Studies
Abstract
This article examines the agency of youth in Alavanyo and Nkonya and how they navigate the
social, economic, and political difficulties of life in the context of an ongoing land conflict dating
back to the early 1900s. In Ghana, because land is the basis of economic potential and spirituality,
identity, history, rootedness, and belonging for groups and individuals, it has become a major
contested entity, producing many intractable conflicts. In Alavanyo and Nkonya, the youth who
are at the centre of the conflict and have had their futures made opaque and truncated by many
challenging situations. Over the years, traditional dispute resolution approaches were led by chiefs.
court rulings, and mediation committees set up by the state of Ghana, as well as by the UNDP,
aimed at resolving the land conflict, have all been unsuccessful. This context has pushed the
youth to develop a process of social navigation through farming, illegal marijuana cultivation,
illicit timber logging, and the okada transport business to cope with the challenges of everyday
life. The article contends that, while the area has lands that are fertile for agrarian activities, the
youth are unable to harness the potential of the land because of the ongoing conflict.
Description
Research Article
