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Spatial heterogeneity in drinking water sources in the Greater Accra Metropolitan Area (GAMA), Ghana
Tetteh Jacob Doku Templeton Michael R. Cavanaugh Alicia Bixby Honor Owusu George Yidana Sandow Mark Moulds Simon Robinson Brian Baumgartner Jill Annim Samuel Kobina Quartey Rosalind Mintah Samilia E. Bawah Ayaga Agula Arku Raphael E. Ezzati Majid Agyei-Mensah Samuel 《Population and environment》2022,44(1-2):46-76
Population and Environment - Universal access to safe drinking water is essential to population health and well-being, as recognized in the Sustainable Development Goals (SDG). To develop targeted... 相似文献
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A comparative study of ethnic residential segregation in Ghana’s two largest cities,Accra and Kumasi
The rate of urbanization is far more rapid in sub-Saharan Africa than in any other major region of the world. However, little
is known about patterns of ethnic residential segregation in rapidly urbanizing African cities. This paper is crafted to make
an important contribution through its focus on Ghana’s two largest cities: Accra and Kumasi. Making use of the most recent
population and housing census data of 2000 to generate a Location Quotient index, the analyses explore the cities’ degree
of ethnic diversity and concentration for comparative purposes. In relative terms, the study reveals that the level of residential
ethnic segregation is fairly balanced in Accra compared to Kumasi. However, there are important differences between the findings
of this Ghanaian case study and findings from research in the West, where the residential segregation is heavily determined
by cultural/racial factors in addition to socio-economic factors. In the absence of institutional and ethnic discrimination,
the most fundamental underlying cause of segregation in the Ghanaian case appears to be the socio-economic circumstance of
ethnic groups present in the cities. The paper concludes by exploring the implications of the study for urban and national
development in Ghana as well as the future patterns of ethnic clustering likely to emerge in Accra and Kumasi. 相似文献
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