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Incommensurable languages of value and petro-geographies: land-use, decision-making and conflict in South-Western Ghana

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Time: 2.00pm - 3.00pm
Price: free

Incommensurable languages of value and petro-geographies: land-use, decision-making and conflict in South-Western Ghana

The Political Economy Research Group (PERG) at Kingston University explores the dynamics of accumulation, distribution, and conflict in its new online summer seminars. Join us and our great line-up of speakers for our live web events!

This week we welcome William Otchere-Darko (University of Milano Bicocca) and Jesse S. Ovadia (University of Windsor, Canada).

Petroleum in Ghana has created new dilemmas for land control and spatial planning. This paper explores petro-geographies using the concept of "incommensurable values" to situate the multiple, conflicting, and intersecting values and framings attached to land. We identify languages of value used by non-state actors that reflect the need for social-market investments, gainful employment, food security, and protection from expropriation and pollution. We find that these languages are incommensurate with those of state actors, who emphasize efficiency, competitiveness, and voluntariness in pursuit of the "highest and best use of land and petroleum resources". The spatial outcomes reflect a singularization of local incommensurable land values into commensurable spatial forms, creating an enabling environment for private and centralized extractive capital. Rural displacement and urban gentrification have become the costs of speculative "oil city projects" and "petro-industrial hubs". The central government, state agencies, oil companies, and other stakeholders, have engaged in "value-legitimation" processes reflecting different values, backgrounds, and power positions. These processes delegitimize local conceptions of value in land, creating new contradictions and avenues for conflict. As a result, local knowledge and values are replaced with logics of market deregulation and "efficiency" in a "locking-in" of a new approach to planning and spatial development that will have significant impacts on economies, livelihoods and food security.

Once registered, you will be emailed with a link to the webinar platform 2 hours prior the event, and again 10 minutes before the event begins. You do not need an account to view.

Booking is essential to attend this event.

For further information about this event:

Contact: Dr Christina Wolf
Email: C.Wolf@kingston.ac.uk