Sanitation investments in Ghana: An ethnographic investigation of the role of tenure security, land ownership and livelihoods

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Standard

Sanitation investments in Ghana : An ethnographic investigation of the role of tenure security, land ownership and livelihoods. / Awunyo-Akaba, Y.; Awunyo-Akaba, J.; Gyapong, M.; Senah, K.; Konradsen, F.; Rheinländer, T.

I: BMC Public Health, Bind 16, 594, 18.07.2016, s. 1-12.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Awunyo-Akaba, Y, Awunyo-Akaba, J, Gyapong, M, Senah, K, Konradsen, F & Rheinländer, T 2016, 'Sanitation investments in Ghana: An ethnographic investigation of the role of tenure security, land ownership and livelihoods', BMC Public Health, bind 16, 594, s. 1-12. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-016-3283-7

APA

Awunyo-Akaba, Y., Awunyo-Akaba, J., Gyapong, M., Senah, K., Konradsen, F., & Rheinländer, T. (2016). Sanitation investments in Ghana: An ethnographic investigation of the role of tenure security, land ownership and livelihoods. BMC Public Health, 16, 1-12. [594]. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-016-3283-7

Vancouver

Awunyo-Akaba Y, Awunyo-Akaba J, Gyapong M, Senah K, Konradsen F, Rheinländer T. Sanitation investments in Ghana: An ethnographic investigation of the role of tenure security, land ownership and livelihoods. BMC Public Health. 2016 jul. 18;16:1-12. 594. https://doi.org/10.1186/s12889-016-3283-7

Author

Awunyo-Akaba, Y. ; Awunyo-Akaba, J. ; Gyapong, M. ; Senah, K. ; Konradsen, F. ; Rheinländer, T. / Sanitation investments in Ghana : An ethnographic investigation of the role of tenure security, land ownership and livelihoods. I: BMC Public Health. 2016 ; Bind 16. s. 1-12.

Bibtex

@article{d8e34e4e479247ae9be892430f100ca9,
title = "Sanitation investments in Ghana: An ethnographic investigation of the role of tenure security, land ownership and livelihoods",
abstract = "Background:Ghana{\textquoteright}s low investment in household sanitation is evident from the low rates of improved sanitation. This study analysed how land ownership, tenancy security and livelihood patterns are related to sanitation investments in three adjacent rural and peri-urban communities in a district close to Accra, Ghana{\textquoteright}s capital.Methods:Qualitative data was gathered for this comparative ethnographic study over seven months, (June, 2011-January, 2012) using an average of 43 (bi-weekly) participant observation per community and 56 in-depth interviews. Detailed observational data from study communities were triangulated with multiple interview material and contextual knowledge on social structures, history of settlement, land use, livelihoods, and access to and perceptions about sanitation.Results:This study shows that the history of settlement and land ownership issues are highly correlated with people{\textquoteright}s willingness and ability to invest in household sanitation across all communities. The status of being a stranger i.e. migrant in the area left some populations without rights over the land they occupied and with low incentives to invest in sanitation, while indigenous communities were challenged by the increasing appropriation of their land for commercial enterprises and for governmental development projects. Interview responses suggest that increasing migrant population and the high demand for housing in the face of limited available space has resulted in general unwillingness and inability to establish private sanitation facilities in the communities. The increasing population has also created high demand for cheap accommodation, pushing tenants to accept informal tenancy agreements that provided for poor sanitation facilities. In addition, poor knowledge of tenancy rights leaves tenants in no position to demand sanitation improvements and therefore landlords feel no obligation or motivation to provide and maintain domestic sanitation facilities.Conclusions:The study states that poor land rights, the history of settlements, in-migration and insecure tenancy are key components that are associated with local livelihoods and investments in private sanitation in rapidly changing rural and peri-urban communities of Ghana. Sanitation policy makers and programme managers must acknowledge that these profound local, ethnic and economic forces are shaping people{\textquoteright}s abilities and motivations for sanitation investments.",
keywords = "Ethnicity, Ghana, Land ownership, Livelihoods, Political power, Sanitation investments, Sanitation infrastructure",
author = "Y. Awunyo-Akaba and J. Awunyo-Akaba and M. Gyapong and K. Senah and F. Konradsen and T. Rheinl{\"a}nder",
year = "2016",
month = jul,
day = "18",
doi = "10.1186/s12889-016-3283-7",
language = "English",
volume = "16",
pages = "1--12",
journal = "BMC Public Health",
issn = "1471-2458",
publisher = "BioMed Central Ltd.",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Sanitation investments in Ghana

T2 - An ethnographic investigation of the role of tenure security, land ownership and livelihoods

AU - Awunyo-Akaba, Y.

AU - Awunyo-Akaba, J.

AU - Gyapong, M.

AU - Senah, K.

AU - Konradsen, F.

AU - Rheinländer, T.

PY - 2016/7/18

Y1 - 2016/7/18

N2 - Background:Ghana’s low investment in household sanitation is evident from the low rates of improved sanitation. This study analysed how land ownership, tenancy security and livelihood patterns are related to sanitation investments in three adjacent rural and peri-urban communities in a district close to Accra, Ghana’s capital.Methods:Qualitative data was gathered for this comparative ethnographic study over seven months, (June, 2011-January, 2012) using an average of 43 (bi-weekly) participant observation per community and 56 in-depth interviews. Detailed observational data from study communities were triangulated with multiple interview material and contextual knowledge on social structures, history of settlement, land use, livelihoods, and access to and perceptions about sanitation.Results:This study shows that the history of settlement and land ownership issues are highly correlated with people’s willingness and ability to invest in household sanitation across all communities. The status of being a stranger i.e. migrant in the area left some populations without rights over the land they occupied and with low incentives to invest in sanitation, while indigenous communities were challenged by the increasing appropriation of their land for commercial enterprises and for governmental development projects. Interview responses suggest that increasing migrant population and the high demand for housing in the face of limited available space has resulted in general unwillingness and inability to establish private sanitation facilities in the communities. The increasing population has also created high demand for cheap accommodation, pushing tenants to accept informal tenancy agreements that provided for poor sanitation facilities. In addition, poor knowledge of tenancy rights leaves tenants in no position to demand sanitation improvements and therefore landlords feel no obligation or motivation to provide and maintain domestic sanitation facilities.Conclusions:The study states that poor land rights, the history of settlements, in-migration and insecure tenancy are key components that are associated with local livelihoods and investments in private sanitation in rapidly changing rural and peri-urban communities of Ghana. Sanitation policy makers and programme managers must acknowledge that these profound local, ethnic and economic forces are shaping people’s abilities and motivations for sanitation investments.

AB - Background:Ghana’s low investment in household sanitation is evident from the low rates of improved sanitation. This study analysed how land ownership, tenancy security and livelihood patterns are related to sanitation investments in three adjacent rural and peri-urban communities in a district close to Accra, Ghana’s capital.Methods:Qualitative data was gathered for this comparative ethnographic study over seven months, (June, 2011-January, 2012) using an average of 43 (bi-weekly) participant observation per community and 56 in-depth interviews. Detailed observational data from study communities were triangulated with multiple interview material and contextual knowledge on social structures, history of settlement, land use, livelihoods, and access to and perceptions about sanitation.Results:This study shows that the history of settlement and land ownership issues are highly correlated with people’s willingness and ability to invest in household sanitation across all communities. The status of being a stranger i.e. migrant in the area left some populations without rights over the land they occupied and with low incentives to invest in sanitation, while indigenous communities were challenged by the increasing appropriation of their land for commercial enterprises and for governmental development projects. Interview responses suggest that increasing migrant population and the high demand for housing in the face of limited available space has resulted in general unwillingness and inability to establish private sanitation facilities in the communities. The increasing population has also created high demand for cheap accommodation, pushing tenants to accept informal tenancy agreements that provided for poor sanitation facilities. In addition, poor knowledge of tenancy rights leaves tenants in no position to demand sanitation improvements and therefore landlords feel no obligation or motivation to provide and maintain domestic sanitation facilities.Conclusions:The study states that poor land rights, the history of settlements, in-migration and insecure tenancy are key components that are associated with local livelihoods and investments in private sanitation in rapidly changing rural and peri-urban communities of Ghana. Sanitation policy makers and programme managers must acknowledge that these profound local, ethnic and economic forces are shaping people’s abilities and motivations for sanitation investments.

KW - Ethnicity

KW - Ghana

KW - Land ownership

KW - Livelihoods

KW - Political power

KW - Sanitation investments

KW - Sanitation infrastructure

U2 - 10.1186/s12889-016-3283-7

DO - 10.1186/s12889-016-3283-7

M3 - Journal article

C2 - 27430737

VL - 16

SP - 1

EP - 12

JO - BMC Public Health

JF - BMC Public Health

SN - 1471-2458

M1 - 594

ER -

ID: 164383336