Institute of African Studies

  1. Abdellatif, Mostafa and Kambon, O. (Accepted for Publication). Recalling a Common Struggle for Pan-Africanism: Nkrumah’s and Nasser’s Policies on the Congo Crisis (1960-1966). IAS 50th Anniversary Conference Publication.
  2. Addo, I. A., (2015). Assessing residential satisfaction in multihabitation in Greater Accra Metropolitan Area (GAMA). Urban Studies. Pp. 1-20 DOI: 10.1177/0042098015571055 Sage Publication
  3. Adjei, G.K. (accepted). Metaphors of power: Abentia at the Installation of a chief in Ahanta-Ghana   (presented for peer review and publication in the Journal of International Library of African Music (ILAM), in South Africa)
  4. Adjei. G.K. (2015) Creative Transformation in African Art Music: A case study, Contemporary Journal of African Studies. ISSN 2343-6530. Vol. 3. No. 1 (2015) pp 35-64.  Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana.
  5. Adjei. G.K. (accepted). “Kwabena Nketia and the genesis of archival Collections at the Institute of African Studies”  in Discourses in African Musicology. Co-Publishers, African Studies Center, University of Michigan Office of the Senior Vice Provost for Academic Affairs, University of Michigan and Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana. ISBN: 978-1-60785-347-3 (paper) pp 538-550
  6. Adomako Ampofo, Akosua,  Edwin Asa Adjei, and Mame Kyerewaa Brobbey. 2015. “Feminisms and Acculturation around the Globe” in James D. Wright (editor-in-chief), International Encyclopedia of the Social & Behavioral Sciences, 2nd edition, Vol 8. Oxford: Elsevier: 905–911. 
  7. Akrofi Ansah, M. and Nana Ama Agyeman. 2015. ‘Ghana Language-in-Education Policy: The Survival of Two South-Guan Minority Languages.’ Per Linguam- A Journal for Language Learning.Vol. 31 (1) 89-104.
  8. Akrofi Ansah, Mercy. 2014. ‘Information Packaging: Focus Marking and Focus Constructions in Leteh (Larteh).’ Nordic Journal of African Studies. 23 (3): 162-179.
  9. Akrofi Ansah, Mercy. 2015. ‘Typology of Leteh (Larteh) Restricted Verbal Clauses.’ Journal of West African Languages.Vol. XLIV. No. 1. 2-13.
  10. Akyeampong, E. and Ntewusu, S. A., (2014). ‘Rum, Gin and Maize: Deities and Ritual Change in the Gold Coast during the Atlantic Era (16th century to 1850). Afriques: Débats, méthodes et terrains d’histoire, ( 5)
  11. Ampene, Kwasi, Akosua Adomako Ampofo, Albert Awedoba, and Godwin K. Adjei (Eds.) 2015. A Festschrift in honour of Emeritus Profesor J.H Kwabena Nketia. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press (in press).  
  12. Anyidoho, Nana Akua and Akosua Adomako Ampofo. 2015. “’How can I come to work on Saturday when I have a family?’ Ghanaian Women and Bank Work in a Neo-Liberal Era” in Cheryl Rodriguez, Dzodzi Tsikata and Akosua Adomako Ampofo. Collaborative Traditions and Transcontinental Connections (Eds.) Transatlantic Feminisms: Women’s and Gender Studies in Africa and the Diaspora. Lanham, MD, Lexington Books, 297-318.
  13. Appeaning Addo, I., (2014). Urban Low Income Housing Development in Ghana: Politics, Policy and Challenges (Chapter 6) in Miguel P. Amado (Ed) “Urban Planning: Practices, Challenges and Benefits”. Nova Science Publishers.
  14. Appeaning Addo, I., & Codjoe, S. C. (under review). Exploring the link between fisher folks’ experiential knowledge and climate variability in an urban coastal community in Accra. Indilinga
  15. Appeaning Addo, Irene, (accepted). Housing maintenance in multi-habited low income houses in some communities in Accra: Policy implications. Property Management, Emerald Insight. DOI: PM-04-2015-0017
  16. Asante Richard (2014) “Voters Participation in Local Government Elections: The Case Study of Asante Akim South District, Ghana”. The Journal of African & Asian Local Government Studies, Vol.3, No.1.
  17. Atobrah Deborah and Adomako Ampofo Akosua “If I don’t get the money then what is my use?”: Husbands’ Care of Wives Diagnosed with Cancer in Accra. (Accepted, working on reviewer’s comments) African Studies Review, Special Issue.
  18. Atobrah Deborah and Eweh Promise (under review) International Travel Restrictions as a Preventive Measure against the Spread of the Ebola Virus Disease (EVD): Pragmatism or Defiance?
  19. Atobrah Deborah and Kwansa Ben (under review) Frazer’s Hierarchical Ordering of Bodies and Cultures of Disease Disclosure among African Presidents
  20. Atobrah, Deborah. (2014). Review of Medische Antropologie Jaargang 22, Nummer 1, 2010 ed Anja Hiddinga et al. Contemporary Journal of African Studies Vol. 2. No. 1(2014) 107-109.
  21. Biney, I. K., Appeaning Addo, I. & Abu, M., (2014). The Effect of the 1987 Education Reforms on Youth Unemployment in Ghana: An Exploratory Study in Coleen Roscoe (Ed) “Ghana: Social, Economic and Political Issues”. Pp.295-312. Nova Science Publishers
  22. Brindle, J., Dakubu, M. E. K., & Kambon, O. (2015). Kiliji, An Unrecorded Spiritual Language of Eastern Ghana. Journal of West African Languages, 42(1). http://main.journalofwestafricanlanguages.org/index.php/downloads/downlo...
  23. Kambon, O. (2015). African Languages, Acquisition of. (M. J. Shujaa & K. J. Shujaa Eds.). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, Inc. Hardcover ISBN: 9781452258218. http://knowledge.sagepub.com/view/the-sage-encyclopedia-of-african-cultu...
  24. Kambon, O. (2015). Africanisms in Contemporary English.  (M. J. Shujaa & K. J. Shujaa Eds.). Thousand Oaks, CA: SAGE Publications, Inc. Hardcover ISBN: 9781452258218 http://knowledge.sagepub.com/view/the-sage-encyclopedia-of-african-cultu...
  25. Kambon, O. (2015). Theory of Endogenous and Exogenous Motivation in L2 Migration. Per Linguam, 31(2).
  26. Kambon, O., Osam, E. K., & Amfo, N. A. (2015). A Case for Revisiting Definitions of Serial Verb Constructions – Evidence from Akan Serial Verb Nominalization. Studies in African Linguistics, 44(2).
  27. Kambon, Obadele. (Accepted for Publication). Akan Ananse Stories, Yorùbá Ìjàpá Tales, and the Dikenga Theory: Worldview and Structure. Research in African Literatures.
  28. Kyere, Abena and Adomako and Adomako Ampofo. 2015. “Women doing Music: The Lives and Songs of Contemporary Ghanaian Women Musicians ” in Kwasi Ampene, Akosua Adomako Ampofo, Albert Awedoba, and Godwin K. Adjei (Eds.) A Festschrift in honour of Emeritus Profesor J.H Kwabena Nketia. Ann Arbor: University of Michigan Press.  
  29. Nii-Dortey, M. (2014). “Folk Opera and the Cultural Politics of Post-Independence Ghana: Saka Acquaye’s The Lost Fishermen” in (eds) Peterson et al The Politics of Heritage in Africa: Economics, Histories, and Infrastructures. Cambridge University Press
  30. Ntewusu S. A., (2014). ‘From ex-soldiers to traders and transporters: the case of the Gold Coast Hausa Constabulary: 1874-1942’ In ECAS 2013, 5th European Conference on African Studies “African Dynamics in Multipolar World”. Lisboa: CEI, .ISBN.978-989-732-364-5. p.212-232
  31. Ntewusu S.A. (2014) ‘‘The road to development: The construction and use of ‘the Great North Road’ in Gold Coast,  Ghana, 1900-2000’’  Leiden: ASC Working Paper, Vol.114.
  32. Ntewusu S.A. (2015) ‘ The impact and legacies of German colonialism in Kete Krachi, North-Eastern Ghana’. Leiden: ASC Working Paper, Vol.121
  33. Ntewusu S.A. and Edward Nabigne (2015) So be Nya Dagna? (Is someone injured?): ‘The Evolution and Use of Tricycles in Tamale, Northern Ghana’. In, Akinyinka Akinyoade  and Jan-Bart Gewald, (eds) ‘African Roads to Prosperity. People en Route to Socio-cultural and Economic Transformations. Brill, ISBN 13: 9789004301719
  34. Ntewusu S.A., (2015). ‘Kwame Nkrumah and agricultural development in Northern Ghana’ In, Bea Lundt and Christoph Marx, Kwame Nkrumah Today. The Focus of the historical releases of Ranke Society (HMRG, Vol.28 (2015) Franz Steiner Verlag, Stuttgart.
  35. Ntewusu, S.A. (2014). ‘Serendipity: Conducting Research on Social History in Ghana’s Archives’. History in Africa, 41, pp 417-423 doi:10.1017/ hia.2014.5
  36. Owoahene-Acheampong, S. and Gordon, J. U. (2015). African Studies: knowledge production and beyond. Contemporary Journal of African Studies, Vol. 3, Issue 1, 93-119.
  37. Rodriguez Cheryl, Akosua Adomako Ampofo and Dzodzi Tsikata. (Eds.) 2015. Transatlantic Feminisms: Women’s and Gender Studies in Africa and the Diaspora. Lanham, MD, Lexington Books.
  38. Rodriguez Cheryl, Dzodzi Tsikata and Akosua Adomako Ampofo. 2015. “Collaborative Traditions and Transcontinental Connections” in Cheryl Rodriguez, Dzodzi Tsikata and Akosua Adomako Ampofo. (Eds.) Transatlantic Feminisms: Women’s and Gender Studies in Africa and the Diaspora. Lanham, MD, Lexington Books, vii-xxi.