The Dagara farmer at home and away : migration, environment and development in Ghana

TitleThe Dagara farmer at home and away : migration, environment and development in Ghana
Publication TypeBook
Year of Publication2011
AuthorsK.van der Geest
Series titleAfrican studies collection
Issue33
Date Published2011///
PublisherAfrican Studies Centre
Place PublishedLeiden
Publication Languageeng
ISSN Number978-90-5448-103-41876-018X
KeywordsAgricultural development, Dagari, dissertations (form), environment, Ghana, Internal migration
Abstract

Will people in drylands be forced to migrate due to climate change and environmental degradation? And what impact does migration have on the environment and development in the migrants' home and destination areas? These are some of the questions this study tries to answer. Based on local case study material among the Dagara people of Northwest Ghana and regional analyses of migration propensities and environmental scarcity, this study shows that structural differences in agro-ecological conditions - rather than degradation and disaster - are a principal cause of Dagara migration. The study further challenges alarming findings about deforestation and land degradation as a result of Dagara migration into the Brong Ahafo Region. Lastly, it shows that in the short term out-migration contributes to food and livelihood security in the home area, but in the long run it seems to thwart a transition to more sustainable land use and livelihoods and hamper rural development.

IR handle/ Full text URLhttp://hdl.handle.net/1887/17766
Citation Key3634