R&P Entries

Articles in Journals

Kursah, M. B. & Baabereyir, A. (2018). Willingness to pay for sachet water plastic waste management through deposit-refund system. International Journal of Environment and Waste Management, 19, 1-16. http://www.inderscience.com/info/ingeneral/forthcoming.php?jcode=ijewm. ISSN: 1478-9868

Abstract
Deposit refund system (DRS) combines a tax on product consumption with a refund when the product or its packaging is returned for recycling or for appropriate disposal. The policy is gaining more consideration as it has become difficult to impose a direct tax on disposal, since people may avoid the tax through midnight dumping. However, the willingness to pay (WTP) for DRS has not been explored in Ghana. This study was therefore conducted in order to ascertain whether residents in Accra, Tema and the surrounding communities are willing to pay for plastic waste management using the DRS, how much they are willing to pay as well as their concerns on the implementation of this policy instrument. It also correlated the willingness to pay amount (WTPA) against socio-economic variables such as income, educational level age and neighbourhood type of the residents. Through accidental sampling technique, respondents were randomly approached to participate in the questionnaire administration, and the result coded and analysed in SPSS. The result showed a high level of WTP (64.8%) among participants. The minimum WTPA is 1GHp and the maximum amount is 20GHp, the same amount it costs to purchase the product. The mean WTPA per a sachet is approximately 8GHp (7.75GHp), that is, 40% of the current unit cost of the product (sachet water). The result also showed that lower income earners were willing to pay a higher amount as deposit-refund than the high-income earners. The educational level, age and neighbourhood type correlated positively, while income had an inverse relationship with the WTPA. However, all these socioeconomic variables, with the exception of age, were not statistically significant correlators of WTPA. Also, more than half (51.1%) of the participants thought that DRS was a good policy instrument and did not raise any negative concern about its implementation. However, some concerns such as the nature of the implementation, effectiveness, locational, awareness, incentive and health issues were raised. It is, therefore, recommended that policymakers consider introducing the DRS but in the process address the concerns raised by the study participants.

 

Kursah, M.B (2017). Modelling malaria susceptibility using Geographic Information System. GeoJournal, 82, (6), 1101-1111. DOI: 10.1007/s10708-016-9732-0. http://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10708-016-9732-0. ISSN: 0343-2521

Abstract
Identifying and/or predicting the geography of malaria will help decision makers locate the particular area with the health problem, and to design area-specific interventions. Using GIS (ArcMap 10.1), a spatial analysis of environmental factors that contribute to the spread of malaria vector was conducted to develop a malaria susceptibility model that could be used in effective malaria control planning. The study first determined malaria susceptibility index and combined it with geospatial modelling to predict malaria susceptibility. Clinical malaria cases were then geocoded and tested to determine the accuracy of the prediction. The results show that 72.3, 24.5, 3.1 and 0.1 % of the clinical malaria incidence were found in areas that were predicted to have very high, high, low and very low susceptibility levels. Hence, the model, to a large extent, predicted malaria occurrences. The conclusion is that modelling such as this can help determine spatio-temporal prediction and mapping of malaria incidence to aid in the design and administration of appropriate interventions.

 

Kursah, M.B (2017). GIS and correlation analysis of geo-environmental variables influencing malaria prevalence. Ghana Journal of Geography, 9, (3), 112–131. http://https://www.ajol.info/index.php/gjg/article/view/162542. ISSN: 0855-9414

Abstract
Analysing the significance of geo-environmental variables influencing malaria incidence will help decision makers design area-specific interventions for tackling the menace, particularly in high risk areas. This study applied geocoding and raster extraction functionalities in GIS (ArcMap) and Pearson correlation in SPSS to identify the relationship between five geo-environmental variables and malaria incidence. It first geocoded malaria incidence data and extracted the corresponding values for five geo-environmental variables in ArcMap 10.1. The five geo-environmental variables are: distance to marshy areas, distance to watercourses (rivers and streams), soil water retention capacity, elevation and population. Pearson correlation was then used to find the relationship between the variables and malaria incidence. The study also applied spline interpolation technique to map malaria prevalence in the district using standardised malaria incidence. The result indicates that distance to marshy areas is inversely and significantly (at 1% level) related to malaria incidence. This means that malaria incidence decreases as distance to marshy areas increases. The distance to watercourses and elevation are also inversely related to malaria incidence in the study area. This means that as distance to watercourses increases and elevation rises, malaria incidence decreases. However, these relationships are not statistically significant at any of the conventional levels of significance (p<0.01 and p<0.05). The result also indicates that water retention capacity of different soils and population are positively related to malaria incidence. This means that malaria incidence rises with increases in the two variables, but the relationships are not statistically significant at any of the conventional levels. The study concluded that the null hypothesis (H0) that there is no significant relationship between distance to marshy areas and malaria incidence may be rejected at 1% (P<0.01) level of significance. However, there is not enough evidence to reject the null hypothesis (H0) that there is no significant relationship between distance to watercourses, different soil retention capacity, elevation and population, on the one hand, and malaria incidence on the other. It is, therefore, recommended that much broader settlement planning policies be adopted to curb building in those areas that are malaria prone.

 

Kursah, M.B (2017). Least-cost pipeline using Geographic Information System: The Limit to Technicalities. International Journal of Applied Geospatial Research, 8, (3), 1-15. DOI: 10.4018/ijagr.2017070101. http://https://www.igi-global.com/article/least-cost-pipeline-using-geographic-information-system/181573. ISSN: 1947-9654

Abstract
Increasing demand for water in Wapuli and its environ has led to a proposal to construct a pipeline to link the town to an existing water plant. This paper developed a geospatial model incorporating multi-criteria analysis involving factors such as slope, landcover, watercourses, distance to roads and soil types to determine a least-cost path for the pipeline. However, the least-cost path passes through a tiny sacred grove near Moadani dam, necessitating the generation of a second least-cost path by considering sacred groves as constraint. The result showed that the least-cost path avoided steep slopes, and runs through relatively levelled grounds. This analysis showed the importance of cultural factors in route planning. It is recommended that in route planning attention be given to cultural factors much in the same way as the technical factors.

 

Kursah, M.B (2017). A quantitative methodology for assessing sustainable tourism potentials. Tourism Review International, 21, (1), 63-80. DOI: 10.3727/154427217x14866652018901. http://https://doi.org/10.3727/154427217X14866652018901 . ISSN: 1544-2721

Abstract
Sustainable tourism potential is the measure of the ability and opportunity of material and nonmaterial elements to attract tourists to a destination that takes full account of its current and future socioeconomic and environmental impacts, while addressing the needs of visitors, the industry, the environment, and the host communities. Thus, an effective way to developing sustainable tourism is a better identification of tourism potentials of different areas for accurate planning. Using a quantitative approach, this study identified the pull and push factors in assessing tourism potentials in Ghana, normalized the factors using scaled-item model and weight system assigned by tourists. It also acquired availability scores for each factor in five Municipal and District Assemblies (MDAs) in Ghana and used this to show the application of the model. The final output is the tourism potential index (TPI), which could be used for assessing sustainable tourism development at the micro and the macrolevels. The article concludes with a ranking of the selected MDAs according to their tourism potentials and substantiation of the scaled-item model to be implemented to ensure a sustainable tourism development of the MDAs. For the pull factors, the Effutu municipality with an index of 4.44 is ranked highest, followed in that order by Gomoa West district (4.26), Agona West municipality (4.00), Ajumako-Enyan-Essiam district (3.98), and Gomoa East district (3.9). For the TPI, which included the pull and the push factors, the Effutu municipality is still ranked highest with an index of 3.20. This is followed, in that order, by Gomoa West district (2.99), Ajumako-Enyan-Essiam (2.63), Gomoa East (2.59), and Agona West municipality (2.02), which lost the third position for the least position. Effutu municipality (3.20) with the highest TPI is 1.18 higher than the Agona West municipality (2.02) with the least TPI. It is suggested that examining the tourism potentials of areas based on the pull factors or attraction sites/facilities alone is inadequate as the tourism industry involves other sectors and push factors such as security and safety, socioeconomic, environment, and natural resources.

 

Danso-Wiredu, E. Y. Midheme, E (2017). Slum upgrading in developing countries: lessons from Ghana and Kenya. Ghana Journal of Geography, 9, (1), 88-108. http://https://www.ajol.info/index.php/gjg/article/viewFile/154657/144236.

Abstract
Abstract The proliferation of slums in many cities of the developing countries has been widely discussed in the literature as a great concern to most countries. The complexities of the slum problem make upgrading difficult. To help reduce such complexities, there have been studies focussed on measures put in place by various governments and organisations to help find solutions to the problem. The article analyses some slum upgrading projects discussed in the literature which are deemed to have been successful. The paper identifies common elements in the upgrading programmes in the literature. It assesses two slum upgrading projects from Ghana and Kenya to determine how the elements were factored into the projects’ implementation. The article concludes that stakeholders involved in slum upgrading in Africa should consider the common elements identified to ensure sustainable slum upgrading on the continent. Keywords: Urban slum; Upgrading; Stakeholders; Ghana; Kenya

 

Danso-Wiredu, E. Y (2018). Housing strategies in low income urban communities in Accra, Ghana. GeoJournal, 83, (4), 663-677. DOI: doi 10.1007/s10708-017-9792-9. http://https://link.springer.com/article/10.1007/s10708-017-9792-9. ISSN: 0343-2521

Abstract
As the rent-free compound housing system in Ghana gradually became unpopular, there was the need for state intervention in housing provision. Housing became an important part of the country’s developmental policies through state interventions prior to the late 1970s. The economic crises in 1979 forced the country to opt for Structural Adjustment Programme, compelling the state to relax on its efforts to provide housing for the public. The paper uses the mode of economic integration framework to discuss the various housing forms in the country. It argues, housing provision led by the private sector creates remarked differences between housing for the higher and lower income groups. The study uses two low income communities in Accra to explain different ways by which the urban poor in Ghana accommodate themselves amidst the country’s housing problems. The study concludes there is an alternative to the housing crises in the country which could be found in the public-private investments in the rental form of the compound housing system.

 

Danso-Wiredu, E.Y. (2018). Gendered dynamics and Reciprocity in Fishing Communities in Ghana. The Case of Penkye, Winneba. Journal of Black Studies, Sage publications, 49, (1), 53–70. DOI: 10.1177/0021934717736185. http://journals.sagepub.com/doi/pdf/10.1177/0021934717736185.

Abstract
The history of Penkye is linked to that of Winneba township since it is the first place the Effutu people settled in the town. Located along the coast, majority of its residents are employed in the fishing industry. Intriguing about Penkye is how social and economic livelihoods of residents are entangled in gender roles and reciprocity. The article delves into the institutional embeddedness of fishing and community life. It examines how gender ideologies differentially inform men and women’s roles in the fishing economy. Drawing on interviews conducted with community members, the study constructs economic life stories for men and women within the fishing community. It analyzes how they formulate livelihood strategies differently from other parts of the country as a result. The study concludes that such realities defy the ideologies of the impersonal market economy propagated by the capitalist ideology, thereby questioning the basis of neoliberal ideology that market prices are solely determined by demand and supply interactions. Keywords fishing communities, Winneba, reciprocity, gender roles, communal living

 

3. Ansah, S. D., Pajibo, E. D., & Sarpong, E. O. (2017). Determinants of Teacher Motivation for Job Satisfaction in Public Senior High Schools in the Agona Municipality. Journal of Innovation in Education in Africa, 1, (2), 104-122.

Abstract

 

Faculty of Science EducationAug 27, 20182018/2019

1. Muhammed, A. M., Dominic, O. L., Seidina, I. Y., Sarpong, E. O. & Talabi, A. E. (2018). Nutritional Analysis of Ginger (ZingibreOfficinale) Drink: Potentials for Sports Performance. Medicine and Science in Sports Exercise, 50, (5), 721.

Abstract
PURPOSE: Sport and energy drinks for performance enhancement is a common practice among athletes. These supplements reportedly increases health risks including; dehydration, anxiety, headache, sleep disturbances, caffeine intoxication, withdrawal syndrome, dependence and over working of body systems leading to exploration of alternative traditional herbal supplements like ginger which has both dietary and medicinal values. The purpose of this study is to determine nutritional values of ginger drink and ascertain their potentials for enhancing sport performance. METHODS: Experimental research design was adopted to analyse two versions of ginger drinks prepared using ginger rhizomes (Botanical Identification: UIL/001/1083) was obtained from an open market in Ilorin, Nigeria. Ethical clearance was obtained from the University of Ilorin Ethical Review Committee. The ginger rhizomes was used to prepare 2ml/98ml (H2O) and 3ml/97ml (H2O) of ginger concentration. Six samples; (i) 2ml & (ii) 3ml with 1 cube of sugar (1CS) each (iii) 2ml & (iv) 3ml with 2 cubes of sugar (2CS) each (v) 2ml & (vi) 3ml each with no sugar (NS) were prepared and subjected to proximate analysis at the Department of Industrial Chemistry, University of Ilorin, Nigeria. Statistical analysis was descriptive and nutritional components were reported as percentage per 100ml. RESULTS: Nutritional values of the ginger drinks were similar; all six samples contained protein, fat, carbohydrate, vitamins and essential minerals; the energy value was 168 kj/100ml, which was richer than most energy/sport drinks commonly consumed in Nigeria. These indicated ginger drink might effectively enhance glucose supply for ATP synthesis, delay fatigue, reduce exercise-induced oxidative stress, boost recovery and sport performance. Ginger drink containing 1CS had increased pH/100ml; 3.50% for both 2ml/98ml (H2O) and 3ml/97ml (H2O) but ginger drink containing 2CS had the same pH with NS ginger drink; 3.18% for 2ml/98ml (H2O) and 3.09% for 3ml/97ml (H2O). CONCLUSIONS: Ginger drink is nutritious and might reliably enhance sport performance. Ginger drink with 2CS had less pH implying more potential for sport performance. A follow-up study is ongoing to ascertain the effects of ginger drink on anaerobic and aerobic capacity of athletes.

 

Faculty of Science EducationAug 27, 20182018/2019

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