India-Ghana Relations Political Relations
Total Page:16
File Type:pdf, Size:1020Kb
Load more
Recommended publications
-
A Case Comparison of Ghana, Kenya, and Senegal
1 Democratization and Universal Health Coverage: A Case Comparison of Ghana, Kenya, and Senegal Karen A. Grépin and Kim Yi Dionne This article identifies conditions under which newly established democracies adopt Universal Health Coverage. Drawing on the literature examining democracy and health, we argue that more democratic regimes – where citizens have positive opinions on democracy and where competitive, free and fair elections put pressure on incumbents – will choose health policies targeting a broader proportion of the population. We compare Ghana to Kenya and Senegal, two other countries which have also undergone democratization, but where there have been important differences in the extent to which these democratic changes have been perceived by regular citizens and have translated into electoral competition. We find that Ghana has adopted the most ambitious health reform strategy by designing and implementing the National Health Insurance Scheme (NHIS). We also find that Ghana experienced greater improvements in skilled attendance at birth, childhood immunizations, and improvements in the proportion of children with diarrhea treated by oral rehydration therapy than the other countries since this policy was adopted. These changes also appear to be associated with important changes in health outcomes: both infant and under-five mortality rates declined rapidly since the introduction of the NHIS in Ghana. These improvements in health and health service delivery have also been observed by citizens with a greater proportion of Ghanaians reporting satisfaction with government handling of health service delivery relative to either Kenya or Senegal. We argue that the democratization process can promote the adoption of particular health policies and that this is an important mechanism through which democracy can improve health. -
Ministerial Report English
AFRICAN UNION UNION AFRICAINE UNIÃO AFRICANA Addis Ababa, ETHIOPIA P. O. Box 3243 Telephone 517 700 Cables: OAU, ADDIS ABABA AU CONFERENCE OF MINISTERS OF TRADE 7th ORDINARY SESSION 29 NOVEMBER – 03DECEMBER, 2011 ACCRA, GHANA AU/MIN/TD//Rpt(VII) Original: English REPORT OF THE MEETING OF MINISTERS AU/MIN/TD//Rpt. (VI) Page 1 REPORT OF THE MEETING OF MINISTERS INTRODUCTION 1. The Seventh Ordinary Session of the AU Conference of Ministers of Trade was convened at Ministerial level on 2 nd and 3 rd December 2011, at the Ghana International Conference Centre, Accra, Ghana. The meeting was declared open by H.E. Mrs. Hanna Tetteh, Minister of Trade and Industry of the Republic of Ghana. The Conference was addressed by H.E. Mr. Erastus Mwencha, the Deputy Chairperson of the AUC, and by H.E.Mr. Emmanuel Hategeka, Head of Delegation representing the Minister of trade and Industry of Rwanda, outgoing Chair. ATTENDANCE 2. The meeting was attended by the following Member States: Algeria, Angola, Benin, Botswana, Burundi, Cape Verde, Chad, Congo, Egypt, Eritrea, Ethiopia, Gambia, Ghana, Guinea, Guinea Bissau, Kenya, Lesotho, Libya, Mauritania, Namibia, Niger, Nigeria , Rwanda, Saharawi Arab Democratic Republic, Senegal, Sierra Leone, South Africa, South Sudan, Togo, Tunisia, Zambia and Zimbabwe. 3. The following Regional Economic Communities (RECs) and partner organisations participated in the meeting: COMESA, ECCAS, ECOWAS, SADC, EAC,UEMOA, ACP, ADB, CEPG, Commonwealth Secretariat, DFID, ECDPM, Joint Secretariat Support Unit UNECA/AfDB/AUC, OIF, NEPAD, South Centre, Third World Network Africa, UNECA, UNEP, UNDP, NANTS, SAANA, ACP MTS Programme, World Bank, World Customs Organization, WTO, Action Aid/Ghana, Centre for Africa Development and Progress (CADEP), ENDA Tiers Monde, and PRCCE. -
LETTER to G20, IMF, WORLD BANK, REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT BANKS and NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS
LETTER TO G20, IMF, WORLD BANK, REGIONAL DEVELOPMENT BANKS and NATIONAL GOVERNMENTS We write to call for urgent action to address the global education emergency triggered by Covid-19. With over 1 billion children still out of school because of the lockdown, there is now a real and present danger that the public health crisis will create a COVID generation who lose out on schooling and whose opportunities are permanently damaged. While the more fortunate have had access to alternatives, the world’s poorest children have been locked out of learning, denied internet access, and with the loss of free school meals - once a lifeline for 300 million boys and girls – hunger has grown. An immediate concern, as we bring the lockdown to an end, is the fate of an estimated 30 million children who according to UNESCO may never return to school. For these, the world’s least advantaged children, education is often the only escape from poverty - a route that is in danger of closing. Many of these children are adolescent girls for whom being in school is the best defence against forced marriage and the best hope for a life of expanded opportunity. Many more are young children who risk being forced into exploitative and dangerous labour. And because education is linked to progress in virtually every area of human development – from child survival to maternal health, gender equality, job creation and inclusive economic growth – the education emergency will undermine the prospects for achieving all our 2030 Sustainable Development Goals and potentially set back progress on gender equity by years. -
Rawlings, Sankara, Ghaddafi, and Nasser: Soldiers As Intellectuals, Nationalists, Pan-Africanists, and Statesmen
H-Announce Rawlings, Sankara, Ghaddafi, and Nasser: Soldiers as Intellectuals, Nationalists, Pan-Africanists, and Statesmen Announcement published by Sabella Abidde on Monday, March 29, 2021 Type: Call for Papers Date: May 30, 2021 Location: Alabama, United States Subject Fields: African History / Studies, Area Studies, Black History / Studies, Middle East History / Studies, Political Science Rawlings, Sankara, Ghaddafi, and Nasser Soldiers as Intellectuals, Nationalists, Pan-Africanists, and Statesmen Editors: Sabella Abidde, Ph.D. and Felix Kumah-Abiwu, Ph.D. In the annals of modern African political history, four soldiers and coup plotters -- Jerry Rawlings (Ghana), Moammar Gaddafi (Libya), Thomas Sankara (Burkina Faso), and Gamal Abdel Nasser (Egypt) -- were rarities. They were at once intellectuals, nationalists, pan-Africanists, and statesmen. Their exceptionality is the reason for this edited volume. For more than four decades, beginning in the early 1950s through the tail-end of the twentieth century, Africa was the bastion of military coups bested perhaps only by Latin America. These sudden and extralegal overthrows of governments were so routine that many came to view coupists as unprofessional and unpatriotic members of the military that were ill-equipped to govern modern states and their various institutions. Nonetheless, there were exceptions to the typical: soldiers who transformed their immediate communities and, by extension, the continent. While the military’s role in politics is still a subject of intense debate in the scholarly/public domain, it is indisputable that some of Africa’s former military leaders went on to become icons and respected leaders of their time. The aim of this paper, therefore, is to examine why and how Rawlings, Gaddafi, Sankara, and Nasser became rarities in African and world politics. -
Conflict Prevention in the Greater Horn of Africa
UNITED STATES INSTITUTE OF PEACE Simulation on Conflict Prevention in the Greater Horn of Africa This simulation, while focused around the Ethiopia-Eritrea border conflict, is not an attempt to resolve that conflict: the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) already has a peace plan on the table to which the two parties in conflict have essentially agreed. Rather, participants are asked, in their roles as representatives of OAU member states, to devise a blueprint for preventing the Ethiopian-Eritrean conflict from spreading into neighboring countries and consuming the region in even greater violence. The conflict, a great concern particularly for Somalia and Sudan where civil wars have raged for years, has thrown regional alliances into confusion and is increasingly putting pressure on humanitarian NGOs and other regional parties to contain the conflict. The wars in the Horn of Africa have caused untold death and misery over the past few decades. Simulation participants are asked as well to deal with the many refugees and internally displaced persons in the Horn of Africa, a humanitarian crisis that strains the economies – and the political relations - of the countries in the region. In their roles as OAU representatives, participants in this intricate simulation witness first-hand the tremendous challenge of trying to obtain consensus among multiple actors with often competing agendas on the tools of conflict prevention. Simulation on Conflict Prevention in the Greater Horn of Africa Simulation on Conflict Prevention in the Greater Horn -
Guide to Material at the LBJ Library Pertaining to Africa
LYNDON BAINES JOHNSON L I B R A R Y & M U S E U M www.lbjlibrary.org Revised December 2009 MATERIAL AT THE JOHNSON LIBRARY PERTAINING TO AFRICA [Note: The following related guides are also available: the Middle East; and Foreign Aid, Food for Peace and Third World Economic Development -- Asia, Africa, and Latin America. The United Arab Republic is not included in this guide. Anyone interested in the U.A.R. should consult the guide on the Middle East.] INTRODUCTION This guide lists the principal files at the Johnson Library that contain material on Africa, but it is not exhaustive. While most of the collections listed in the guide have been processed and are available for research, some files may not yet be available. Researchers should consult the Library’s finding aids to locate additional material and to determine whether specific files are available for research. Some of the finding aids are on the Library’s web site, www.lbjlib.utexas.edu, and others can be sent by mail or electronically. Researchers interested in Africa should also consult the Foreign Relations of the United States. This multi-volume series published by the Office of the Historian of the Department of State presents the official documentary historical record of major foreign policy decisions and diplomatic activity of the United States government. The volumes are available online at the Department of State web site which may be accessed at the “Related Links” button, under the “Research” button on the Johnson Library web site, www.lbjlib.utexas.edu. NATIONAL SECURITY FILE This file was the working file of President Johnson's special assistants for national security affairs, McGeorge Bundy and Walt W. -
E Tradequity
TTrradequityadequityee A Newsletter of CUTS Africa Year 13, No. 1/2014 African Consumers: Rise up for your rights hile going through an online blog Eight Basic Won mobile phone services in Kenya Consumer Rights one will come across consumer experiences • Right to Satisfaction like this one, “I am writing to inform other of Basic Needs Kenyans of a disservice my service provider • Right to Safety has done on its consumers. I am sure this • Right to be Informed has affected other users of this network. I • Right to Choose loaded airtime of Kenyan Shillings 800 to • Right to be Heard purchase the 1.5GB internet bundle on • Right to Redress rd 3 March 2012, and then I got a message • Right to Consumer to wait for my bundle to be activated. After Education and three visits and many calls I was told that • Right to a Healthy there is no credit on my phone. Due this Environment harassment and forgery I am switching to another provider”. The comments, under effectively play their role. The judiciary, protection tax or fund, so that these this post had several similar and even more legal fraternity, trade unions, media, CSOs, resources could assist consumer pestering experiences from others. parliamentarians and consumers ought to organisations. CUTS Nairobi participated A Zambian newspaper reported this be activily engaged. actively with other organisations in a public harrowing story that “Some broiler To generate awareness on consumer event organised by the Competition chicken breeders in Kasama (Zambia) were protection issues the ‘World Consumer Authority of Kenya. reportedly mixing feed with Antiretro Viral Rights Day’ (WCRD) is observed every Many consumer protection civil society (ARV) and contraceptive drugs to feed year on March 15, across the globe. -
An Examination of the Opportunities and Challenges Facing Women in Ghana’S Ministry of Foreign Affairs and Regional Integration (2000-2019)
University of Ghana http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh AN EXAMINATION OF THE OPPORTUNITIES AND CHALLENGES FACING WOMEN IN GHANA’S MINISTRY OF FOREIGN AFFAIRS AND REGIONAL INTEGRATION (2000-2019) BY: MAXINE ADWOA ANSAH (10701880) THIS DISSERTATION IS SUBMITED TO THE UNIVERSITY OF GHANA, LEGON, IN PARTIAL FULFILLMENT OF THE REQUIREMENT FOR THE AWARD OF AN MA IN INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS AND DIPLOMACY DEGREE LEGON DECEMBER 2019 University of Ghana http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh DECLARATION I, hereby declare that this dissertation is the result of an original research conducted under the supervision of Dr. Yao Gebe and that all references have been duly acknowledged. This dissertation has not been presented either in whole or in part to any other educational institution for any purpose. …………………………………… …………………………………….. MAXINE ADWOA ANSAH DR. YAO GEBE (STUDENT) (SUPERVISOR) …………………………….. ……………………………………... DATE DATE i University of Ghana http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh DEDICATION This work is dedicated to my mummy, Cecilia Mbroba Baah. Your love and prayers have made this possible. Thank you. ii University of Ghana http://ugspace.ug.edu.gh ACKNOWLEDGEMENT My sincere gratitude goes to God Almighty for His divine strength, direction, teaching and counsel which have guided my work. My appreciation goes to my mummy, Cecilia Mbroba Baah, my aunt Mrs. Julie Asante, my friends Annie Adu-Gyamfi and Michael Kojo Adams for their constant check-ups, words of encouragement and all the sacrifices they made to ensure that I completed this work. To my LECIAD classmates who helped in a myriad of ways to help me finish this work, thank you. To my supervisor, Dr. -
Competitiveness & Diversification
Internati onal Policy Conference Proceedings Competi ti veness and Diversifi cati on: Strategic Challenges in a Petroleum-Rich Economy 14-15th March 2011, Accra, Ghana Disclaimer: This document has been produced without formal United Nations editing. The designations employed and the presentation of the material in this document do not imply the expression of any opinion whatsoever on the part of the Secretariat of the United Nations Industrial Development Organization (UNIDO) concerning the legal status of any country, territory, city or area or of its authorities, or concerning the delimitation of its frontiers or boundaries, or its economic system or degree of development. Designations such as “developed”, “industrialized” and “developing” are intended for statistical conveni- ence and do not necessarily express a judgment about the stage reached by a particular country or area in the development process. Mention of firm names or commercial products does not constitute an endorsement by UNIDO. The opinions, statistical data and estimates contained in signed articles are the responsibility of the author(s) and should not necessarily be considered as reflecting the views or bearing the endorsement of UNIDO. Although great care has been taken to maintain the accuracy of information herein, neither UNIDO nor its Member States assume any responsibility for consequences which may arise from the use of the material. International Policy Conference Proceedings Competitiveness and Diversification: Strategic Challenges in a Petroleum-Rich Economy -
President Mahama Wins Ghana's Election
President Mahama wins Ghana’s election Accra, Dec. 9, - The Electoral Commission(EC)of Ghana on Sunday declared the Presidential Candidate of the National Democratic Congress (NDC), President John Mahama as the winner of the 2012 Presidential Elections. At a press briefing in Accra where hundreds of journalists both local and international had been anxiously waiting for hours for the results to be declared, the Chairman of the Commission, Dr. Kwadwo Afari- Gyan announced that President Mahama polled 5,574,761 votes (50.70%). His closest contestant Nana Akufo-Addo of the New Patriotic (NPP) polled 5,248,898 votes (47.74%). The other results were: Dr Michael Abu Sakara Foster of the Convention People’s Party (CPP) - 20,323 (0.18%) Mr Hassan Ayariga of the People’s National Convention (PNC) - 24,617 (0.22%) Dr Papa Kwesi Nduom of the Progressive People’s Party (PPP) - 64,362 (0.59%) Dr Henry Lartey of the Great Consolidated Popular Party (GCPP) - 38,223 (0.35%) Mr Joseph Osei-Yeboah (Independent) - 15,201 (0.14%) Mr. Akwasi Addai of the United Front Party (UFP) - 8,877 (0.08%). The percentage turnout was 79.43 Total Registered voters were 14,158,890 Total votes cast were 11,246,982 Total Valid Votes -10,995,262 Total Rejected votes -251,720 Total constituencies – 275 Profile of Ghana's President John DramaniMahama President John Dramani Mahama winner of Ghana’s 2012 presidential poll secured 5,574,761 votes representing 50.70% . President Mahama is Ghana’s Fourth President of the Fourth Republic. He was born on November 29, 1958 at Damango, in the Northern Region of Ghana. -
John F. Kennedy, Ghana and the Volta River Project : a Study in American Foreign Policy Towards Neutralist Africa
University of Louisville ThinkIR: The University of Louisville's Institutional Repository Electronic Theses and Dissertations 5-1989 John F. Kennedy, Ghana and the Volta River project : a study in American foreign policy towards neutralist Africa. Kurt X. Metzmeier 1959- University of Louisville Follow this and additional works at: https://ir.library.louisville.edu/etd Recommended Citation Metzmeier, Kurt X. 1959-, "John F. Kennedy, Ghana and the Volta River project : a study in American foreign policy towards neutralist Africa." (1989). Electronic Theses and Dissertations. Paper 967. https://doi.org/10.18297/etd/967 This Master's Thesis is brought to you for free and open access by ThinkIR: The University of Louisville's Institutional Repository. It has been accepted for inclusion in Electronic Theses and Dissertations by an authorized administrator of ThinkIR: The University of Louisville's Institutional Repository. This title appears here courtesy of the author, who has retained all other copyrights. For more information, please contact [email protected]. JOHN F. KENNEDY, GHANA AND THE \\ VOLTA RIVER PROJECT A Study in American Foreign Policy towards Neutralist Africa By Kurt X. Metzmeier B.A., Universdty of Louisville, 1982 A Thesis Submitted to the Faculty of the Graduate School of the University of Louisville in Partial Fulfillment of the Requirements for the Degree of Master of Arts Department of History University of Louisville Louisville, Kentucky May 1989 JOHN F. KENNEDY, GHANA AND THE VOLTA RIVER PROJECT A Study in American Foreign Policy Towards Neutralist Africa By Kurt X. Metzmeier B.A., University of Louisville, 1982 A Thesis• Approved on April 26, 1989 (DATE) By the following Reading Committee: Thesis Director 11 ABSTRACT The emergence of an independent neutralist Africa changed the dynamics of the cold war. -
Short Biography of Samia Nkrumah President Of
SHORT BIOGRAPHY OF SAMIA NKRUMAH PRESIDENT OF KWAME NKRUMAH PAN-AFRICAN CENTRE Samia Yaba Nkrumah is the only daughter of Ghana’s first President, the legendary Osagyefo Dr. Kwame Nkrumah and his Egyptian wife, Madam Fathia Halim Rizk. This unique circumstance of Pan- African birth and cultural inclinations underpin her belief in African unity. A belief and a political conviction that relies as much on the many texts of her father as it does on her own studies, interactions with academics, professionals, artists, students and everyday people across Africa and with Africans outside the continent. Born in 1960, the year Ghana declared its status as a Republic, she and her siblings left Ghana in 1966 after the illegal overthrow of the government of Kwame Nkrumah. For about a decade the family lived in Egypt returning to Ghana in the 70’s and then leaving again in the 80’s. Samia, who is fluent in Arabic, Italian and English and has worked for many years as a journalist and media consultant, was educated in Ghana, Egypt and the UK. She is married and has a son, Kwame. Returning to Ghana permanently in 2008 after many years of living abroad, Samia signaled her intention to “rekindle the vision of Kwame Nkrumah”. This she did by joining the Convention People’s Party (CPP) and contesting the 2008 parliamentary elections in the Jomoro constituency in the Western region of Ghana and winning decisively. In 2011 she made history by becoming the chairpersonship of the CPP, the only female leader of a political party in Ghana and also the youngest to occupy such a prominent role.