Abstract

Pre-colonial patterns of trade in West Africa included exchanges of shea in periodic local and regional markets. The collection, processing and marketing of shea products in such markets continues to be predominantly by women to both meet subsistence needs, and exchange of surpluses. In the early part of the 20 th century, the British colonial administration considered the possibilities of starting large-scale exports of shea kernels to Europe. Multiple colonial initiatives to develop the global trade were not successful due to a composite of factors. Contemporary patterns of production, trade and regulation are contrasted in the context of globalisation in the post-independence era. The government of Ghana has progressively reinforced its ambitions to expand the shea nut trade as part of the state’s portfolio of major non-traditional agricultural export commodities. This policy is embedded within the (now) dominant orthodoxy of neo-liberalism, which privileges monetized production systems and private over public regulation. Historically and culturally-embedded patterns of shea production and trade by women in northern Ghana may now be challenged by the emergence of new processing technologies, the emergence of an oligopolistic global commodity chain and the anticipated continued growth in global demand for cocoa butter equivalents. Nevertheless, the cumulative impacts of increasing commercialisation and world market integration at the national and local level in Ghana, and other West African producer countries, are still unknown. There are risks, however, that this process may result in social differentiation, changes in household consumption patterns and loss of livelihoods, particularly for women.

Highlights

  • Globalisation is an ideological and portmanteau concept employed by many authorities with different meanings and interpretations (Hopkins 2002)

  • And culturally-embedded patterns of shea production and trade by women in northern Ghana may be challenged by the emergence of new processing technologies, the emergence of an oligopolistic global commodity chain and the anticipated continued growth in global demand for cocoa butter equivalents

  • In previous analyses of global agricultural commodity chains emanating from Sub-Saharan African countries, priority has been paid to issues concerning quality regulation, restructuring processes and upgrading (Raikes and Gibbon 2000; Fold 2001; Gibbon 2001; Larsen 2002; Ponte 2002; Mather and Greenberg 2003)

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Summary

Introduction

Globalisation is an ideological and portmanteau concept employed by many authorities with different meanings and interpretations (Hopkins 2002). In previous analyses of global agricultural commodity chains emanating from Sub-Saharan African countries, priority has been paid to issues concerning quality regulation, restructuring processes and upgrading (Raikes and Gibbon 2000; Fold 2001; Gibbon 2001; Larsen 2002; Ponte 2002; Mather and Greenberg 2003) Of these issues, the prospects and potentials for different kinds of agricultural chain upgrading (notably in relation to local valueadded processing in the case of shea nuts and shea butter in northern Ghana) in developing countries is the most relevant seen from a development perspective. This is followed by a summary description of shea production and marketing systems in northern Ghana. In the two following sections, shea trade during the two waves of globalizations in the colonial and post-independence eras are presented and discussed in relation to changing governance regimes prior to some concluding remarks

Historical background to pre-colonial patterns of trade in West Africa
Shea nut production and marketing systems in northern Ghana
Identifying the resource
Investigating the potential of trade in shea nuts
Abandoning the shea nut export trade
Post-colonial efforts to link northern Ghana to the global economy
Intensification and dismantling of public regulation by marketing boards
Liberalisation and consolidation of private regulation
Risks of disintegration
Findings
Conclusions
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