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Dive into the research topics where Samuel Twumasi Amoah is active.

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Featured researches published by Samuel Twumasi Amoah.


Development in Practice | 2016

Tug of war: street trading and city governance in Kumasi, Ghana

Ebenezer Owusu-Sekyere; Samuel Twumasi Amoah; Frank Teng-Zeng

ABSTRACT Kumasi, Ghana, has witnessed accelerated population growth in the past two decades, leading to a significant increase in joblessness following years of economic decline and labour market liberalisation. As a survival strategy, residents have resorted to street trading, making it an important source of livelihood. However, its associated implications for urban governance and management has placed city authorities in the spotlight over the years. Examining the daily struggles that occur between city managers and street traders, this article finds that various strategies adopted by city authorities to decongest the streets have proved futile. Rethinking what could be a sustainable strategy for decongesting the streets of traders, the article concludes that chasing the traders out of the streets is not the panacea to solving the problem unless well coordinated land-use planning and appropriate regulations are competently enforced.


Journal of Contemporary African Studies | 2017

Landfill externalities and property values dilemma – emerging insights from three Ghanaian cities

Martin Oteng-Ababio; Ebenezer Owusu-Sekyere; Samuel Twumasi Amoah

ABSTRACT Though debates about the negative impact landfill exerts on land and property values are by no means historically new, research into the case of developing countries has only recently begun. This article attempts to synthesise existing literature on the subject through the analysis of three case studies to enhance our understanding, especially the contextual conditions surrounding the relationship. Applying this theoretical framework to the disposal practices occurring in three cities in Ghana, this article offers insight into the culpability of landfills in negatively impacting property values. In an illuminating analysis, we argue that most engineered landfills in the country serve as a catalyst in correcting the ills of uncontrolled urbanisation (governance, attitudinal and financial constraints, etc.). We opine that landfills’ relationship with host communities must be understood in relation to our overall underdevelopment, coupled with the increasing economic and technical challenges shaping much of the country’s history.


Urban Research & Practice | 2018

Urban space renaissance of a developing country city

Samuel Twumasi Amoah; Ebenezer Owusu-Sekyere; Emmanuel Narteh Angmor

ABSTRACT African Governments are envisioning their cities in the images of world-class cities elsewhere. This has led to relentless inner-city regeneration but with some challenges. This article examines these challenges and their implications for urban development in the Ghanaian context. Through multiple research techniques, Ghana’s inner-city regeneration revealed contradictions and distortions typified by contestations and dispossessions. The challenges we argue were the offshoot of poor governance with limited community participation in the process, a situation which reflects how urban development is framed in a developing country city. To decipher the challenges will require innovative solutions premised on an all-inclusive urban governance approach.


Journal of Asian and African Studies | 2018

‘Informal Exceptionalism?’ Labour Migrants’ Creative Entrepreneurship for Sustainable Livelihoods in Accra, Ghana

Martin Oteng-Ababio; Augustine Tanle; Samuel Twumasi Amoah; Louis Kusi; Enoch Akwasi Kosoe; Ernest Bagson

Intra- and inter-regional migration is widely described. Prior studies have attribute varied reasons for this development including the quest for greener pastures and unequal development in northern Ghana. What has escaped critical scrutiny is some migrants’ ability to escape extreme rural poverty, albeit in harsh urban environment. Such a missing gap can potentiate high policy failures, hence the need for academic attention. Using a mixed method, we focus on two informal daily livelihoods as exemplars – exceptionalism – in Accra. We see their embedded organisational vitality and dynamic networks as illuminating for good livelihood practices, proper city governance and fostering economic empowerment. We call on city authorities to take cognisance of such complexities and heterogeneity of production–labour relations, failure of which can spell doom for policies ostensibly initiated to curb migration, as they are likely to be underpinned by factual inaccuracies and may result in ill-fated interventions.


Journal of Environment Pollution and Human Health | 2014

Solid Waste Management in Urban Areas of Ghana: Issues and Experiences from Wa

Samuel Twumasi Amoah; Enoch Akwasi Kosoe


Journal of environment and earth science | 2013

Bushfires in the Nandom District of the Upper West Region of Ghana : Perpetual Threat to Food Crop Production.

Abdul-Kadri Yahaya; Samuel Twumasi Amoah


American Journal of Agriculture and Forestry | 2014

Technical Efficiency of Vegetable Farmers in Peri-Urban Ghana Influence and Effects of Resource Inequalities

Samuel Twumasi Amoah; Irene Akobour Debrah; Razak Abubakari


Journal of environment and earth science | 2013

Evolution of Water Systems and its Challenges in the Wa Municipal of Ghana

Samuel Twumasi Amoah; Abdul Kadri Yahaya


Journal of Developing Societies | 2017

Thinking Globally, Acting Locally: Formalizing Informal Solid Waste Management Practices in Ghana

Martin Oteng-Ababio; Ebenezer Owusu-Sekyere; Samuel Twumasi Amoah


BMC Public Health | 2015

Consumption and drinking frequency of alcoholic beverage among women in Ghana: a cross-sectional study

Anthony Mwinilanaa Tampah-Naah; Samuel Twumasi Amoah

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Ebenezer Owusu-Sekyere

University for Development Studies

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Enoch Akwasi Kosoe

University for Development Studies

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Ernest Bagson

University for Development Studies

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