More articles from Research Articles
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- You have accessRestricted access“Where Wisdom Comes”Interview with Eric Allotey, Record Officer at Ghana’s National ArchivesClaire Nicolas and Elisa ProsperettiGhana Studies, November 2024, 27 (1) 142-146; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/gs.27.1.142Claire NicolasSwiss National Science FoundationElisa ProsperettiNanyang Technological University
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- You have accessRestricted accessReflections on Higher Education in Ghana and Peter Ekeh’s Two PublicsDelali AmuzuGhana Studies, February 2023, 25 (1) 57-80; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/gs.25.1.57Delali AmuzuUniversity of Ghana
- You have accessRestricted accessRevisiting Kwame Nkrumah’s African PersonalityThe Diaspora Context and the Making of Ghana TelevisionEmmanuella AmohGhana Studies, February 2023, 25 (1) 33-56; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/gs.25.1.33Emmanuella AmohPurdue University
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- You have accessRestricted accessNot Just ClothesThe Importance of Traditional Clothes to Ghanaians in OldenburgPaul AgoeGhana Studies, January 2022, 24 (1) 17-41; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/gs.24.1.17Paul AgoeBielefeld University
- You have accessRestricted accessForestry and the “World on Paper”Ideas of Science and Resistance to Forest Reservation on the Gold Coast in the Early Twentieth CenturyTimothy VilgiateGhana Studies, January 2020, 23 (1) 3-27; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/gs.23.1.3Timothy VilgiateTimothy Vilgiate ([email protected]) is a PhD student in History at the University of Texas-Austin.
- You have accessRestricted accessDumsor and Dumsor-Based NeologismsA Constructionist Account of Their Structure and FormationClement Kwamina Insaidoo Appah and Gladys Nyarko AnsahGhana Studies, January 2020, 23 (1) 28-55; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/gs.23.1.28Clement Kwamina Insaidoo AppahClement Kwamina Insaidoo Appah () is a Senior Lecturer in Linguistics at the University of Ghana. He holds a PhD in Linguistics from Lancaster University in the UK and was a Commonwealth Scholar (2008–2012). His research interest lies in Kwa morpho-syntax. His recent work has been in Linguistic Morphology and Morphological theory. He has published extensively on issues such as compounding, nominalization, diminutives, numeral constructions, serial verbs constructions and humor-inspired lexicalia. An area of emphasis in his work has been how to account for properties of complex linguistic expressions that do not come from their constituents.Gladys Nyarko AnsahGladys Nyarko Ansah () holds a PhD in Applied Linguistics from Lancaster University, UK, and an MRes in Cognitive Linguistics from the University of Brighton, UK. She is a Senior Lecturer at the Department of English, University of Ghana, Legon. Her research interests lie in the following areas of language studies: language in education, language and migration, language and politics, language and culture, bi/multilingualism, and language and cognition. Her recent publications include: The choice of English as a home language in urban Ghana. In Current Issues in Language Planning, 1–17. (2019), and Acculturation and integration: Language dynamics in the rural north-urban south mobility situation in Ghana. In Legon Journal of the Humanities, 29(1), 53–72. (2018).

