TY - CHAP
T1 - Changing Labour Relations in Commercial Agrarian Landscapes in Ghana
AU - Teye, Joseph Kofi
AU - Torvikey, Gertrude Dzifa
AU - Awetori Yaro, Joseph
N1 - Publisher Copyright:
© The Editor(s) (if applicable) and The Author(s), under exclusive licence to Springer Nature Singapore Pte Ltd. 2021.
PY - 2021/1/1
Y1 - 2021/1/1
N2 - Labour relations have shaped agricultural production in Ghana’s peasant economy. In the current neoliberal development era, where land is under siege, the labour question has become even more important in the evolution of labour regimes in agrarian areas. This chapter used qualitative and quantitative data from a three year agricultural research project to discuss the changing labour relations in the current conjuncture, and also to explain in what ways some older labour practices are changing and new ones emerging. We found that while poorer farmers still depend on family labour, the involvement of wives and children have different connotations. Wives’ work on farms remained unpaid and deemed part of their conjugal duties, while work of children is paid and regarded as intergenerational transfer of knowledge. Similarly, while wealthy farmers welcome their educated sons on farms, wives are pushed out so that the man could consolidate his hold on resources from the successful farming enterprise. The constellations in the family labour practices also have important implications for hired labour practices which continued to be centred on sexual division of labour which perpetuates the exploitation of female labour both in the household and on large farms. Additionally, increased wealth of an agricultural household deepens sexual division of labour in the household and pushes women further into reproductive roles. This chapter argues that commercial farming is inducing changes in labour relations, especially unfavourable gender and intergenerational transformations.
AB - Labour relations have shaped agricultural production in Ghana’s peasant economy. In the current neoliberal development era, where land is under siege, the labour question has become even more important in the evolution of labour regimes in agrarian areas. This chapter used qualitative and quantitative data from a three year agricultural research project to discuss the changing labour relations in the current conjuncture, and also to explain in what ways some older labour practices are changing and new ones emerging. We found that while poorer farmers still depend on family labour, the involvement of wives and children have different connotations. Wives’ work on farms remained unpaid and deemed part of their conjugal duties, while work of children is paid and regarded as intergenerational transfer of knowledge. Similarly, while wealthy farmers welcome their educated sons on farms, wives are pushed out so that the man could consolidate his hold on resources from the successful farming enterprise. The constellations in the family labour practices also have important implications for hired labour practices which continued to be centred on sexual division of labour which perpetuates the exploitation of female labour both in the household and on large farms. Additionally, increased wealth of an agricultural household deepens sexual division of labour in the household and pushes women further into reproductive roles. This chapter argues that commercial farming is inducing changes in labour relations, especially unfavourable gender and intergenerational transformations.
KW - Agrarian Landscapes
KW - Agricultural commercialisation
KW - Gender
KW - Ghana
KW - Labour Relations
UR - http://www.scopus.com/inward/record.url?scp=85150545397&partnerID=8YFLogxK
U2 - 10.1007/978-981-33-4635-2_19
DO - 10.1007/978-981-33-4635-2_19
M3 - Chapter
AN - SCOPUS:85150545397
SN - 9789813346345
SP - 413
EP - 438
BT - Labour Questions in the Global South
PB - Springer Singapore
ER -