Rethinking the Agency of Women in the Shea Industry

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/0256-8845/4693

Keywords:

Ghana, women, development, shea industry, economic, northern region

Abstract

The agency of women in most African countries is often affected by the socio-economic and political policies that are almost always disadvantageous to women, especially women who have little to no knowledge of their rights. Using the shea industry in Ghana as a case study, I chronicle the challenges as recounted by rural women involved in this home-based work in the Northern Region of Ghana and critically analyse these challenges and their implications. Focusing mainly on the results of my recent field work, I present some of the accounts relating to the lack and exclusion of recognition of and respect for the experiences of rural women who are in fact the linchpin of the shea industry in Ghana. Initiatives and strategies of non-governmental organisations and some governmental policies have attempted to address these challenges that have implications for the livelihoods of rural women. Research and policies have only offered “band-aid solutions†to the economic disempowerment of rural women in the shea industry in Ghana as they have not dealt with the causes. This article seeks to refute the claim that equity exists by indicating the lack of equity and justice in the policies in the shea industry. In an attempt to provide an understanding of the economic disempowerment of women in this industry, I consider my field work as a good source as it exposes the experiences and everyday practices as narrated by rural women in the industry. This article seeks to analyse the existing discourses especially those pertaining to the contributions and experiences of rural women in the shea industry.

Author Biography

Abiba Yayah, Stellenbosch University

Doctoral Student

Department of Political Science

Published

2018-12-03

How to Cite

Yayah, Abiba. 2018. “Rethinking the Agency of Women in the Shea Industry”. Politeia 37 (1):16 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/0256-8845/4693.

Issue

Section

Articles
Received 2018-08-20
Accepted 2018-08-27
Published 2018-12-03