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Long-Term Patterns of Change in the Commercialisation of Cocoa in Ghana: Forest Frontiers and Technological Transformation

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posted on 2024-09-05, 20:57 authored by Kojo Amanor, Joseph Yaro, Joseph Teye
The commercialisation of cocoa production in Ghana has a long history dating back to the nineteenth century. The process of commercial development in cocoa is well documented and provides an alternative mode to contemporary models of commercialisation rooted in the adoption of modern technology and integration of farmers into markets. This working paper critically analyses frameworks for agricultural commercialisation in cocoa through intensification based on the uptake of synthetic inputs and hybrid seeds, by placing agricultural development within a broader framework of the historical development of the frontier in Ghana, and the related problems of ecological and economic crises. The study examines access to land, labour and technology, and how the complex interactions of scarcity of access to physical resources and labour influence farmers’ farming strategies and adoption of technology.

Funding

Department for International Development, UK Government

History

Publisher

APRA, Future Agricultures Consortium

Citation

Amanor, K., Yaro, J. and Teye, J. (2021) Long-Term Patterns of Change in the Commercialisation of Cocoa in Ghana: Forest Frontiers and Technological Transformation. APRA Working Paper 76. Brighton: Future Agricultures Consortium, DOI: 10.19088/APRA.2021.045

Series

APRA Working Paper 76

Version

  • VoR (Version of Record)

IDS Item Types

Series paper (non-IDS)

Copyright holder

APRA, Future Agricultures Consortium

Country

Ghana

Language

en

IDS team

Rural Futures

Project identifier

APRA::e1f6d3be-457a-4f13-8b1f-6748d1402d83::600

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    Future Agricultures Consortium

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