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ODOOM, ISAAC (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   153648


Dam in, cocoa out; pipes in, oil out: China’s engagement in Ghana’s energy sector / Odoom, Isaac   Journal Article
Odoom, Isaac Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract Ghana, like other African countries, suffers a huge infrastructure gap. In recent times China has become a major bilateral source of investment in Ghana’s energy infrastructure. This article examines the strategic importance of Chinese infrastructure investment in Ghana’s energy sector in recent times. The study is based on field research conducted by the author in Ghana and on the analysis of semi-structured interviews with Ghanaian policy makers, journalists, civil society organizations, academics and individuals. Additional data were collected on some key projects China has been sponsoring in the energy sector. The paper suggests that China has become a key partner in Ghana’s development efforts as its provision of infrastructural projects soars and its involvement in Ghana’s economy grows. Yet China’s engagement presents a complex dynamic given its dual role as financier of energy infrastructure and at the same time a competitor or seeker of Ghana’s oil and other natural resources.
Key Words Energy  Oil  China  Infrastructure  Ghana  Cocoa 
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2
ID:   151484


What/who is still missing in international relations scholarship? situating Africa as an agent in ir theorising / Andrews, Nathan; Odoom, Isaac   Journal Article
Andrews, Nathan Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper engages with non-Western, specifically African, scholarship and insight with the goal of highlighting the importance of African contributions to IR theorising. We highlight the Western dominance in IR theorising and examine the inadequacy of the major analytical constructs provided by established IR theory in capturing and explaining shifting reality in Africa. We argue that African insights, experience and ideas present a challenge to dominant IR constructs and knowledge within the international system, and that these insights, when taken seriously, would enrich our understanding of IR. We show this by problematising some central (often taken-for-granted) IR concepts such as the state, liberalism and individualism and underscore the need to reconstruct more encompassing ‘stories’ and images to innovate, revise and potentially replace some of the conventional ‘stories’ that have been told in IR.
Key Words State  Liberalism  Africa  Individualism  IR Theory  Non-Western 
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