Date of Thesis
Spring 2026
Description
This research examines the relationship between environmental degradation and food systems in Ghana. Although sociological research has explored how extractive practices like gold mining dispossesses farmers of land (Gilbert and Albert 2016; Agariga 2021; Kwang and Blagogie 2025), the consequences for food sovereignty and security remain understudied. Research that considers food and land from a sociocultural perspective is even more limited. My research addresses these gaps by asking: How do environmental degradation practices—specifically gold mining and chemical use—affect food production, distribution, and security in Ghana? And how does the decline of arable land reshape cultural food identity? To explore these questions, I used qualitative interviews, policy analysis, and a review of existing scholarship. Over three months, I conducted 35 semi-structured interviews (20–60 minutes each) with small-scale farmers, cash crop farmers, and market vendors in Cape Coast, Agona, Kumasi, Obuasi, Busia, Tarkwa, Ho, and Mankessim. This approach centered local perspectives while capturing the broader structural context (Gyan and Mfoafo-M’Carthy 2021; Thow et al. 2021; Ahmed et al. 2021). Findings indicate that while mining has long been part of Ghanaian society, its mechanization under British colonial rule intensified environmental harm, disrupting food production and distribution and deepening food insecurity. Those in lower economic tiers—farmers, Indigenous miners, and non-mining community members—bear the greatest burdens. Chemical use in small-scale agriculture reflects unequal access to quality inputs and pressures to maximize cash crop yields, degrading land and risking health. Participants also expressed concern over cultural loss as farmland diminishes, though some resist by revitalizing traditional agricultural practices.
Keywords
Ghana, Food Systems, Gold mining, Food Justice, Pesticides
Access Type
Honors Thesis
Degree Type
Bachelor of Arts
Major
Sociology
First Advisor
Apollonya Porcelli
Second Advisor
Janet Adomako
Recommended Citation
Vinson, Da'Mirah, "Environmental Degradation and Food Systems in Ghana: Gold Mining and Synthetic Pesticides" (2026). Honors Theses. 767.
https://digitalcommons.bucknell.edu/honors_theses/767
Included in
Economics Commons, International and Area Studies Commons, Public Affairs, Public Policy and Public Administration Commons, Sociology Commons
