essay

Kinship and cocoa farming in Ghana

female and male in west africaLondon • Published In 1983 • Pages: 169-178

By: Okali, Christine.

Abstract
In this article, Okali finds that matrilineal kinship ideology and practice continue to play a significant role in the establishment of new cocoa farms by migrant families. It is argued that kinship would play less of a role, and contractual relationships more of one, in the productive relations of the frontier. However, Okali argues that family and lineage members continue to help each other out--making the whole project feasible in the first place--and maintain the customary exchanges between spouses, parents and children, and among lineage members. However exchanges and inheritance are more circumscribed on the frontier: limited to the family and lineage members who actually worked to help open and support the farm.
Subjects
Tillage
Special crops
Real property
Acquisition and relinquishment of property
Household
culture
Akan
HRAF PubDate
2000
Region
Africa
Sub Region
Western Africa
Document Type
essay
Evaluation
Creator Type
Technical Personnel
Document Rating
4: Excellent Secondary Data
5: Excellent Primary Data
Analyst
Ian Skoggard ; 1999
Field Date
1971-1973
Coverage Date
1940-1980
Coverage Place
Ashanti; Akokoaso and Dominase, Ghana
Notes
Christine Okali
For bibliographical references see document 56: Anonymous
LCCN
82020767
LCSH
Akan (African people)