Women in Ghana.
There's heavy burden for women in Ghana who don't have children.
Proverbs suggest ways for the Akan people to govern their emotions in daily life.
jbdodane/Flickr
Proverbs are generally regarded as repositories of folk wisdom and are used widely in African settings.
When the wheels of partnership turn smoothly, Africa can benefit enormously.
EtiAmmos/Shutterstock
It’s all too common for local scholars to be sidelined in what are supposed to be genuine research partnerships.
Different approaches to e-governance could bear fruit for African countries.
jurgenfr/Shutterstock
African countries’ adoption of e-government platforms hasn’t served the majority of their citizens.
Many children got burn injuries because of poor housing.
Shutterstock
Research found that burns were most common among children under five years.
Andrew Foster with students from the boarding school for deaf children at Mampong-Akwapim, Ghana, about 1961.
Courtesy of Gallaudet University Archives
Ghana urgently needs an official Ghanaian Sign Language (GSL) policy. Such a move has the potential to humanize education for people who are Deaf and alleviate the linguistic discrimination they face.
Fighting deadly diseases such as Ebola is a strong case for providing donor aid to authoritarian countries like the DRC.
EPA-EFE/Ahmed Jallanzo
Aid has never been just about helping people. It’s also about gaining influence and exercising soft power.
Medium-scale African farmers are relatively wealthy and influential.
BOULENGER Xavier/Shutterstock
Medium-scale farms are an important driver of agricultural and rural transformation in much of Africa.
Drones are low cost and easy to operate.
Shutterstock/Halfpoint
Drones are low cost and easy to operate. They give quality, high resolution outputs, and can be deployed fast and often.
Ghana’s newspapers are largely doing a good job when it comes to mental health reporting.
Francisco Anzola/Flickr
Ghana’s print media plays in shaping public opinion and disseminating knowledge about mental health disorders.
Archival illustration of the Christiansborg Castle.
Danish National Museum
Archaeological research at Christiansborg Castle in Ghana has provided an in-depth understanding of Danish, Ga and Danish-Ga lived experiences during the eighteenth century transatlantic slave trade.
Police in Ghana have a reputation for intimidation, violence and corruption.
UNMISS/Flickr
Poor supervision, poor training, and unfair treatment of lower-ranked officers make misconduct more likely to happen among Ghana’s police force.
Cellphones are everywhere in Africa - but that doesn’t mean the digital divide is closing.
Legnan Koula/EPA
We don’t have the data in developing countries, and in global statistics to know if the digital divide is being closed.
In certain communities in Benin, Togo and Ghana, young virgin girls are sent to atone for their family’s wrongdoing.
Linda De Volder/Flickr
Trokosi is an ancient practice in West Africa where virgin girls, some as young as six are sent as slaves to make amends for wrongs committed by their families.
Ghana has at least one one major flood disaster every year.
chunya2009/Flickr
Ghana needs to deal with the underlying causes of floods and prepare people for them.
Accra’s sprawling slums.
Nataly Reinch/Shutterstock
Research in Ghana shows that improving slum housing could be one of the alternatives to the capital’s housing crisis.
A street procession during the Chale Wote festival in 2018.
Ruth Simbao
Walking is crucial during the Chale Wote festival as most activities happen on the street.
A bustling local market in Kumasi, Ghana.
Adam Kohn/Flickr
Policymakers in Africa approach rural and urban development separately. This needs to change.
Herbalists mostly recommend treating underlying physiological condition through herbal remedies.
UNAMID/Flickr
Understanding the different beliefs about disorders is important in efforts to improve mental health care in developing countries.
Home page of the BBC News Pidgin website.
BBC News Pidgin
West African pidgins are unique, showing that they have come to stay no matter what some say or feel about them.