Africa
- You have accessRestricted accessOut of Place?Mixed-Race Identities in GhanaGeraldine A. Ampah and Akosua K. DarkwahGhana Studies, April 2026, 28 (1) 197-219; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/gs.28.1.197Geraldine A. AmpahUniversity of GhanaAkosua K. DarkwahUniversity of Ghana
- You have accessRestricted accessBewitching the StateGender Contestations and Transgressive Citizenship Amid Economic Crisis in Ghana, 1972–1979Afua Baafi QuarshieGhana Studies, November 2024, 27 (1) 94-114; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/gs.27.1.94Afua Baafi QuarshieJohns Hopkins University
- You have accessRestricted accessWomen, Gender, and “Specifically Historical” Research on GhanaA RetrospectiveKate SkinnerGhana Studies, January 2018, 21 (1) 95-120; DOI: https://doi.org/10.3368/gs.21.1.95Kate SkinnerKate Skinner () is a senior lecturer in the History of Africa and Its Diasporas at the University of Birmingham UK. Her first book, The Fruits of Freedom in British Togoland (Cambridge University Press, 2015), is concerned with education, literacy, and politics in the Ghana-Togo borderlands, while the present article reflects some of her more recent research interests.

