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OVADIA, JESSE SALAH (2) answer(s).
 
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ID:   176490


Ghana's petroleum industry: expectations, frustrations and anger in coastal communities / Ovadia, Jesse Salah; Alstine, James Van ; Ayelazuno, Jasper Abembia   Journal Article
Ayelazuno, Jasper Abembia Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract With much fanfare, Ghana's Jubilee Oil Field was discovered in 2007 and began producing oil in 2010. In the six coastal districts nearest the offshore fields, expectations of oil-backed development have been raised. However, there is growing concern over what locals perceive to be negative impacts of oil and gas production. Based on field research conducted in 2010 and 2015 in the same communities in each district, this paper presents a longitudinal study of the impacts (real and perceived) of oil and gas production in Ghana. With few identifiable benefits beyond corporate social responsibility projects often disconnected from local development priorities, communities are growing angrier at their loss of livelihoods, increased social ills and dispossession from land and ocean. Assuming that others must be benefiting from the petroleum resources being extracted near their communities, there is growing frustration. High expectations, real and perceived grievances, and increasing social fragmentation threaten to lead to conflict and underdevelopment.
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2
ID:   159396


Studying the developmental state: theory and method in research on industrial policy and state-led development in Africa / Ovadia, Jesse Salah   Journal Article
Ovadia, Jesse Salah Journal Article
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Summary/Abstract This paper examines theoretical and methodological issues in the study of African developmental states. We argue that applying this concept beyond East Asia must take into account changes in the global economic context – in particular systemic tendencies towards deficient consumer demand – to uncover the conditions under which demand for commodity production remains or becomes expansionary. We further argue for a mixed methods case study approach to structural transformation, blending quantitative and qualitative evidence at multiple levels of analysis. The examples of concrete manufacturing and oil and gas in Nigeria and Tanzania illustrate our approach to researching state-led development in Africa.
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