| Literature DB >> 28890590 |
Abstract
This article focuses on the relationship between in-migration from Northern Ghana and changing land tenure norms in Ghana's central "transition zone" in Brong Ahafo Region. Using the complex adaptive systems (CAS) theoretical framework, it theorizes this relationship as part of a wider set of "co-evolving" social and environmental conditions across Brong Ahafo. It presents new qualitative research findings which show differentiated livelihood trajectories for Northern Ghanaian migrant farmers in Brong Ahafo in three case study sites in different districts and links these to migrants' diverse land tenure arrangements under customary tenure regimes in Brong Ahafo. I argue that differentiated outcomes for migrants at rural destinations have implications for the extent to which out-migration from environmentally marginal regions such as Northern Ghana can be viewed as a form of "adaptation" to environmental change.Entities:
Keywords: Adaptation; Land tenure; Migration; Poverty; Rural livelihoods
Year: 2017 PMID: 28890590 PMCID: PMC5570778 DOI: 10.1007/s11111-017-0277-z
Source DB: PubMed Journal: Popul Environ ISSN: 0199-0039
Fig. 1Fieldwork sites (locations approximate to protect research participant anonymity; created using ArcMap)
Fig. 2Stratified individual land access (rented and owned) among migrants at the three case study communities: average land holdings by livelihood grouping
Fig. 3Average annual cash remittances (Ghanaian cedis) sent by Northern Ghanaian migrants, by livelihood trajectory