Title

Ocean and land grabbing in Ghana's offshore petroleum industry: From the agrarian question to the question of industrialization

Document Type

Article

Publication Date

10-1-2022

Publication Title

Journal of Agrarian Change

Volume

22

Issue

4

First Page

673

Keywords

blue economy, Ghana, industrialization, land/ocean grabbing, oil & gas

Last Page

702

Abstract

Ghana's petroleum industry is located several nautical miles offshore in the Western Region of the country. Yet, the mechanisms and processes of production and transportation of crude petroleum are accompanied by the dispossessing of the adjoining coastal communities of their means of (re)production both on the ocean and on land. Although the insights of agrarian political economy have been deployed fruitfully to analyse land grabs in Africa, similar efforts are rare when it comes to ocean grabs. With reference to the new development thinking on the ocean economy—or ‘blue economy’—as the new frontier of resource-based industrialization in Africa, we re-frame the agrarian question and apply it to the offshore petroleum industry, expanding agrarian political-economic theory of industrialization beyond its traditional confines of land and agriculture. Our paper makes two main theoretical contributions. First, it contributes to efforts in agrarian political economy to incorporate the ocean and fisheries. Second, we contribute a fresh theoretical framework for analysing offshore petroleum industries and their potential to contribute to industrialization in Africa.

DOI

10.1111/joac.12502

ISSN

14710358

E-ISSN

14710366

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