Leeds Thesis Template
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
The Politics of Pay Reforms in Ghana
Journal of African Political Economy & Development | Volume 1 | December 2016 ISSN: 2518-847X THE POLITICS OF PAY REFORMS IN GHANA Joseph R. A. Ayee1 Institute of Economic Affairs, Ghana Email: [email protected] Abstract Public sector pay is a major fiscal policy challenge in most African countries. Accordingly, countries have implemented various approaches to develop a realistic and acceptable pay policy. Ghana is no exception to the trend. Succeeding governments undertook without much progress pay reforms and reviews aimed at improving public service salaries and managing the recurring canker of disparities, inequities and imbalances in the pay administration system. As a contribution to the continued search for cogent reasons to explain the poor implementation of the Single Spine Pay Policy (SSPP), this paper adopts a political economy approach that shows sensitivity to the fact that the implementation of the SSPP is inherently complex and political; it is not just a technical exercise or a public service problem and therefore needs to be linked to the political objectives of the government, the interests of the groups affected, including those of the political elite and unions and associations as well as the prevailing political environment. The paper also discusses some of the policy and institutional framework deficits that have hampered the smooth implementation of the SSPP, which will need urgent attention by the government and other stakeholders, notwithstanding some of the gains made. Keywords: Ghana; Politics; Pay reforms; Single spine pay policy. 1. Introduction There seems to be a consensus that pay (salaries, allowances, in-kind and retirement benefits) is a key public service issue because adequate pay is crucial to sustaining motivation, performance and integrity of public servants.1 Public sector pay is also a major fiscal policy in most African countries. -
Aid and Agriculture
Aid and Agriculture A constructivist approach to a political economy analysis of sustainable agriculture in Ghana Thesis submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy (Dr. phil.) at the Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources, Albert-Ludwigs-Universität Freiburg im Breisgau Jasmin Marston 2017 Dean: Prof. Dr. Tim Freytag 1st Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Rüdiger Glaser 2nd Supervisor: Prof. Dr. Tim Freytag 2nd Reviewer: Prof. Dr. Michael Pregernig Date of thesis defense:12.06.2018 In memory of: Karl Wendelin Klober and Uwe Josef Kristen (06.11.1928-26.09.2015) (22.03.1960-11.11.2016) Acknowledgements i Acknowledgements This study has been inspired and supported by a wide array of individuals and institutions that my gratitude extends to. The quality of research benefited tremendously from the support given by the members of the Department of Physical Geography and Faculty of Environment and Natural Resources at the University of Freiburg (im Breisgau, Germany). Specifically I would like to thank Prof. Dr. Rüdiger Glaser, Prof. Dr. Tim Freytag, Prof. Dr. Michael Pregernig, as well as the entire Physical Geography team, for the trust and support they have given me at crucial parts of this study. Likewise I am deeply grateful for the support extended through the UrbanFoodPlus project, which is jointly funded by the Bundesministerium für Wirtschafltiche Zusammenarbeit und Entwicklung (BMZ, Federal Ministry for Economic Cooperation and Development), Germany, and the Bundesministerium für Bildung und Forschung (BMBF, Federal Ministry of Education and Research), Germany. In particular I would like to thank Prof. Dr. Axel Drescher, who was the Principle Investigator and a crucial supporter throughout the ups and downs I encountered as a researcher. -
The Role of Insurance in Inclusive Growth: Ghana Diagnostic
The role of insurance in inclusive growth: Ghana Diagnostic December 2018 Authors Mia Thom Nichola Beyers Kate Rinehart Jana de Waal Esethu Cengu Jeremy Gray Editing and research support: Takalani Malivha, Lisa Bruwer, Antoine Fourie and Karen Levent Acknowledgments The authors would like to extend their gratitude to all of those who assisted us in compiling this report. Our partner organisations played a crucial role in providing inputs, testing our insights and providing support throughout the project. In particular, we would like to thank Helen Edmundson and Ron Bohlander from DFID; Juliet Munro from FSDA and Craig Thorburn and Fiona Stewart from the World Bank. Sumana Hussein and the DFID Ghana team provided valuable guidance, inputs and support throughout the research process. Both the Ministry of Finance (MoF) and National Insurance Commission (NIC) went out of their way to assist on the project and provided indispensable inputs into this research. Sampson Akligoh and Benjamin Torsah- Klu from MoF and Kofi Andoh and Seth Eshun from NIC were invaluable guides to Ghana’s policy and regulatory environment. We would like to thank the various stakeholders we met with from government, financial services providers, industry bodies, technology providers and donor agencies for their time and the insights that guided this research and their efforts to develop the insurance industry. Finally, we would like to thank the people of Ghana, who were unfailingly friendly and helpful and provided us with indispensable insights into the financial lives of Ghanaians. Collaboration The Department for International Development (DFID) has partnered with FSDA, Cenfri and the World Bank to conduct a series of diagnostic studies into the role of insurance in development to answer the following question: How can insurance better contribute to inclusive growth within developing countries? i Table of contents Executive summary ........................................................................................................................ -
Downloads/A Referencing Style Guide.Htm [Accessed 25 Sept 2013] Birmingham: University of Birmingham
A University of Sussex DPhil thesis Available online via Sussex Research Online: http://sro.sussex.ac.uk/ This thesis is protected by copyright which belongs to the author. This thesis cannot be reproduced or quoted extensively from without first obtaining permission in writing from the Author The content must not be changed in any way or sold commercially in any format or medium without the formal permission of the Author When referring to this work, full bibliographic details including the author, title, awarding institution and date of the thesis must be given Please visit Sussex Research Online for more information and further details A Case Study of the Development of Science, Technology and Innovation Policy at the Higher Education Level in Ghana Matthew Karikari-Ababio Submitted to the University of Sussex for the degree of Doctor of Education October 2013 1 I hereby declare that this thesis has not been and will not be submitted in whole or in part to another University for the award of any other degree Signature 2 UNIVERSITY OF SUSSEX Matthew Karikari-Ababio Doctor of Education A Case Study of the Development of Science, Technology and Innovation Policy at the Higher Education Level in Ghana Summary It has been nearly fifty-four years since Ghana nursed the dream of rapid social and economic development through science, technology and innovation. Ghana is yet to experience technological transformation to the level of other countries with which she was at par at the time of her independence. Gaps in understanding still remain in the Ghanaian experience in the development of Science, Technology and Innovation (STI) policy. -
Desk Review for Ghana
External evaluation of mobile phone technology-based nutrition and agriculture advisory services in Africa and South Asia Desk-review: Smallholder farming, nutrition and m- Agriculture services in Ghana Barnett, I. and Srivastava, S. 7 February 2017 e-Pact is a consortium led by Oxford Policy Management and co-managed with Itad Desk-review: Smallholder farming, nutrition and m-Agriculture services in Ghana Acknowledgements The authors would like to thank Ms Ting Yang and Walaa Talaat for their comments and feedback on this publication. The team would also like to thank OPM and DFID for their ongoing support and input on this project. This project is funded with UK aid from the UK government. Disclaimer This report has been prepared by the e-Pact consortium for the named client, for services specified in the Terms of Reference and contract of engagement. The information contained in this report shall not be disclosed to any other party, or used or disclosed in whole or in part without agreement from the e-Pact consortium. For reports that are formally put into the public domain, any use of the information in this report should include a citation that acknowledges the e-Pact consortium as the author of the report. This confidentiality clause applies to all pages and information included in this report. This project is being led by the Institute of Development Studies (IDS) as part of the e-Pact consortium led by Oxford Policy Management (OPM) co-managed with ITAD. The project manager is Jessica Gordon [[email protected]]. The report authors are Inka Barnett and Shilpi Srivastara. -
2010 Ghana 2010 Ghana Millennium Development
2010 GHANA MILLENNIUM DEVELOPMENT GOALS REPORT NOVEMBER 2012 i 2010 Ghana Millennium Development Goals Report © UNDP, Ghana and NDPC/GOG 2012 ALL RIGHTS RESERVED No part of this publication may be produced, stored in a retrieval system or transmitted, in any form or by any means, electronic, mechanical, photocopying, recording or otherwise, without prior permission of UNDP, Ghana ISBN 9988 ......................... ii 2010 Ghana Millennium Development Goals Report TABLE OF CONTENTS TABLE OF CONTENTS ...................................................................................................................... ii LIST OF TABLES AND FIGURES ..................................................................................................... v LIST OF ACRONYMS AND ABBREVIATIONS ............................................................................. vii 1. INTRODUCTION ............................................................................................................................ 1 2. GLOBAL AND NATIONAL CONTEXT ........................................................................................ 3 2.1 GLOBAL OVERVIEW ................................................................................................................ 3 2.2 NATIONAL CONTEXT ............................................................................................................... 5 3. PROGRESS TOWARDS ACHIEVING THE MDGS IN GHANA .............................................. 11 GOAL 1: ERADICATION OF EXTREME POVERTY AND HUNGER ......................................... -
I Strong Institutions in Weak States
Strong Institutions in Weak States: Institution Building, Natural Resource Governance, and Conflict in Ghana and Sierra Leone by McKenzie F. Johnson University Program in Environmental Policy Duke University Date March 9, 2017 Approved: ___________________________ Erika Weinthal, Supervisor ___________________________ Jack Knight ___________________________ Margaret McKean ___________________________ Jeffrey Vincent ___________________________ Elizabeth Shapiro-Garza Dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the University Program in Environmental Policy in the Graduate School of Duke University 2017 i v ABSTRACT Strong Institutions in Weak States: Institution Building, Natural Resource Governance, and Conflict in Ghana and Sierra Leone by McKenzie F. Johnson University Program in Environmental Policy Duke University Date: March 9, 2017 Approved: ___________________________ Erika Weinthal, Supervisor ___________________________ Jack Knight ___________________________ Margaret McKean ___________________________ Jeffrey Vincent ___________________________ Elizabeth Shapiro-Garza An abstract of a dissertation submitted in partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the University Program in Environmental Policy in the Graduate School of Duke University 2017 Copyright by McKenzie F. Johnson 2017 Abstract Since the end of the Cold War, natural resources have assumed an increasingly prominent role in security, conflict, and peace studies. -
Watchdog Or Lapdog: Limits of African Media Coverage of the Extractive Sector
z Watchdog or Lapdog: Limits of African Media Coverage of the Extractive Sector James Christian Canonge + Matthew Purcell with Michael Behrman School of International and Public Affairs COLUMBIA UNIVERSITY EXECUTIVE SUMMARY The purpose of this study is to evaluate the quality of African media coverage of the extractive industries. This sector plays prominently on the African political, economic, social and journalistic landscape, yet coverage of these industries remains a challenge for African journalists. The financial and technical aspects of the extractive sector are complex, and both governments and companies often have a vested interest in withholding information from journalists. Many reporters lack sufficient training, resources and/or journalistic freedom to publish accurate, well‐researched, in‐depth coverage. As a result, what are arguably some of the most critical industries on the continent operate in relative freedom from public scrutiny. By making a careful study of African media coverage of the extractive sector in three countries, this report hopes to identify key strengths and weaknesses in extractive industry reporting as well as opportunities for media support and the expansion or revision of current media training efforts. The discovery of oil in Uganda in 2006 and in Ghana in 2007 brought both a great deal of excitement and a considerable level of worry to these countries. While extractive resources (oil, gas and mining) are a leading source of wealth for many African countries, this wealth often leads to corruption and conflict. In fact, countries with abundant natural resources tend to fall below less resource‐wealthy countries in terms of human development, a paradox economist Richard Auty and subsequent researchers have labeled the “resource curse.” This report is based on two premises: first, that if Africans are to benefit from the immense resource stores that lie beneath their soil, great efforts must be made toward transparency in how these resources are handled. -
Newspaper Framing of the National Health
Promoting a New Health Policy in the Ghanaian Media: Newspaper Framing of the National Health Insurance Scheme from 2005-2007 A dissertation presented to the faculty of the Scripps College of Communication of Ohio University In partial fulfillment of the requirements for the degree Doctor of Philosophy Andrews Ofori-Birikorang August 2009 © 2009 Andrews Ofori-Birikorang. All Rights Reserved. This dissertation titled Promoting a New Health Policy in the Ghanaian Media: Newspaper Framing of the National Health Insurance Scheme from 2005-2007 by ANDREWS OFORI-BIRIKORANG has been approved for the School of Media Arts and Studies and the Scripps College of Communication by Steve Howard Professor of Media Arts and Studies Gregory J. Shepherd Dean, Scripps College of Communication ii ABSTRACT OFORI-BIRIKORANG, ANDREWS, Ph.D., August 2009, Mass Communication Promoting a New Health Policy in the Ghanaian Media: Newspaper Framing of the National Health Insurance Scheme from 2005-2007 (278 pp.) Director of Dissertation: Steve Howard This research examined the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS) in Ghana to understand the frames and representations used by the local newspapers to promote the policy. The study also examined the major themes that were embedded in the NHIS news stories and the extent to which they promoted official perspectives. Again, it investigated the culture and ideology that guided media professionals in the representation of the NHIS. Framing analysis was used as a major theoretical tool for the study, particularly news frame. The inquiry also explored the relationship between framing and ideology as connected concepts that are rarely interrogated in media studies, especially, in the construction of new stories. -
Broadcasting Reform in Ghana: a Critical Analysis Of
BROADCASTING REFORM IN GHANA: A CRITICAL ANALYSIS OF BROADCASTING POLICY AND REGULATORY CHANGE 1994-2008 Abubakari Sidick Ahmed A thesis submitted to the Faculty of Humanities University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg, in fulfillment of the requirements for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy (PhD) Johannesburg 2012 Abstract This study is a critical policy analysis on broadcasting reform in Ghana between 1992 and 2008 with a particular interest in critically tracking and examining the changes that occurred in broadcasting policy and regulation. Beyond the intrinsic value and relevance of policy and regulation, this study focuses on the factors and forces that are generative of the changes as occurring within the context of a defunct military regime to a more pluralistic, multi-party and open participatory democratic political system. Also, in focus are the ways in which the policy and regulatory changes occurred, the impact of the changes on the Ghanaian broadcasting system and its structures. The study not only examined and corroborated related policy and regulatory documents from primary and secondary sources but also garnered insights of policy-making “actors” interviewed. Finally, the study determines the policy and regulatory gaps in an attempt to provide recommendations for a new broadcasting policy and regulatory direction for the country. ii Declaration I declare that this thesis is my own unaided work. It is submitted for the degree of Doctor of Philosophy, at the University of the Witwatersrand, Johannesburg. It has not been submitted before for any other degree or examination at any other university. ---------------------------------- Abubakari Sidick Ahmed ----------------day of ....................2012 iii Dedication To my family, doctors, nurses and true friends Who took excellent care of me when I fell ill With sincere thanks for their love, encouragement and hope during the writing of this thesis. -
Performance Management and Local Government Administration in Ghana: the Case of the District Development Facility and the Functional Organisational Assessment Tool
Performance Management and Local Government Administration in Ghana: The Case of the District Development Facility and the Functional Organisational Assessment Tool A Thesis Submitted to the University of Manchester for the Degree of Doctor of Philosophy in the Faculty of Humanities 2014 Hamza Bukari Zakaria Institute for Development Policy and Management (IDPM) School of Environment, Education and Development Table of Contents List of Tables.............................................................................................................................. 8 List of Figures ............................................................................................................................ 9 List of Acronyms and Abbreviations ....................................................................................... 10 Abstract .................................................................................................................................... 12 Declaration ............................................................................................................................... 13 Copyright Statement ................................................................................................................ 13 Acknowledgement.................................................................................................................... 14 Dedication ................................................................................................................................ 15 Chapter 1: General -
Patronage of Graphic Showbiz, a Comparative Study of Students And
University of Ghana http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh PATRONAGE OF GRAPHIC SHOWBIZ: A COMPARATIVE STUDY OF STUDENTS AND WORKERS AT OSU BY NANABANYIN DADS ON A DISSERTATION SUBMITTED TO THE SCHOOL OF COMMUNICATION STUDIES, UNIVERSITY OF GHANA, IN PARTIAL FULFILMENT OF THE REQUIREMENTS FOR THE AWARD OF A MASTER OF ARTS DEGREE SEPTEMBER, 2004 University of Ghana http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh DECLARATION I declare that this work was undertaken personally by me under the supervision of Professor Kwasi Ansu- Kyeremeh, Director of the School of Communication Studies, University of Ghana, Legon. References made to the work of other researchers and scholars have been duly acknowledged. I also declare that none of the material contained herein has been presented either wholly or in part for any degree in this or any other university. /~ ~b-\-:-~~ .............-.-- . NANABANYIN DADSON PROF. KWASI ANSU-KYEREMEH CANDIDATE SUPERVISOR University of Ghana http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh DEDICATION To Adokowa. To Mimi And Saturday-born: Kwamena, Ato and Ewurama 11 1 University of Ghana http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh ACKNOWLEDGEMENT In writing this dissertation, I am most indebted to all people who have contributed in various ways to make the study possible. I thank my supervisor, Prof. Kwasi Ansu-Kyeremeh, without whose scholarly guidance this work could not have been completed. I also thank the lecturers at the School of Communication Studies whose total contribution to my enlightenment made this work possible. My thanks to Mr. Jacob Evans Arthur (Nana Kofi Pamfo), my "typing editor" and the management of Graphic Communications group who kindly offered me paid study leave and encouraged me to undertake the course.