2020
DOI: 10.3390/land9090300
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Highlighting the Sustainability Implications of Urbanisation: A Comparative Analysis of Two Urban Areas in Ghana

Abstract: Ghana is urbanising rapidly, and over half of the country’s population have lived in urban areas since 2010. Although research has proliferated to explore Ghana’s urbanisation, there is a dearth of research that holistically explores the wider sustainability implications of urbanisation, offers comparative perspectives in the context of large and smaller urban areas, and provides a perspective of local level urbanisation in the context of resource extraction (mining). This study comparatively assesses two urba… Show more

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Cited by 33 publications
(18 citation statements)
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“…Pregnant adolescent mothers require a good source of income for both their survival and the upkeep of their babies when they are born. However, unemployment in Ghana is a social problem, where graduates of tertiary institutions are unable to find jobs [15]. Results from this present study are consistent with findings from a similar study by [16] in which about 74% of sampled adolescent girls in Ghana were unemployed.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…Pregnant adolescent mothers require a good source of income for both their survival and the upkeep of their babies when they are born. However, unemployment in Ghana is a social problem, where graduates of tertiary institutions are unable to find jobs [15]. Results from this present study are consistent with findings from a similar study by [16] in which about 74% of sampled adolescent girls in Ghana were unemployed.…”
Section: Discussionsupporting
confidence: 90%
“…With regard to non-urban land-use, per-capita indicators provide an even more significant view; in the case of agricultural landscapes, the negative evolution of per-capita cropland indicated the impossibility to satisfy the growing (local) demand for fresh food. These contexts, however, were known for centuries for their specialization in primary production, which experienced a significant decline in the most recent decades [68]. Therefore, a recent analysis [69] argues that there is a need to focus more on the form and quality of urbanization processes rather than simply on the volume and speed of urbanization.…”
Section: Discussionmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…Due to the high level of financial support, the marginal utility of land urbanization is extremely low or even negative, so we need to adjust the efficiency of capital allocation to adapt to the current stage of China's development, for instance expanding the capital flow in order to meet the capital demand effectively and improve the quality for land urbanization construction, thus promoting the efficient combination of new urbanization construction and financial development. According to the impact of the economy on sustainable urbanization of two cities in Ghana, Anarfi Kwasi et al mentioned that cities can create employment opportunities by making use of land for industrial construction in order to improve productivity and in turn promote economic growth [52]. Second, based on the abundant land resources, the urbanization level for the western region is not high.…”
Section: Conclusion and Suggestionsmentioning
confidence: 99%