The Political Economy Of Natural Resource Conflicts In Ghana: The Case Of The Songor
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World Development Perspectives
Abstract
In contrast to studies that assume that self-interest is the primary factor motivating African leaders in natural
resource conflicts, we argue that successive Ghanaian governments have intervened in these conflicts by
attempting to balance the imperatives of national development, neoliberal reforms, and regime survival. This
argument is based on an analysis of the struggles over access to the Songor – a salt-yielding lagoon in southeastern Ghana – as an outcome of the social contradiction engendered by the pursuit of high modernist devel opment aspirations within a framework of neoliberal austerity. In Ghana, successive governments have deployed
the coercive apparatus of the state on behalf of private investors in their struggles with community members over
access to the Songor. Drawing on interviews, focus group discussions, policy documents and media reports, we
argue that the fate of the communities around the Songor illustrates the infringement on economic and cultural
rights of local communities when such rights clash with the developmental aspirations of national elites. The
resulting economic and social dislocations experienced by the affected communities have been implicitly
accepted by the government as the necessary price to pay for development of the salt industry in Ghana. The
Songor case also illustrates a fundamental paradox of neoliberal development where the state is expected to
abandon its economic role, but the private sector is incapable of filling the gap without substantial material
support from the state.
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Lawer, E. T., Siakwah, P., Mba, C. C., & Asante, K. T. (2024). The political economy of natural resource conflicts in Ghana: The case of the Songor. World Development Perspectives, 36, 100641.
