Transformative public policy design? The lifeworld of early postcolonial social policy in Ghana

Based on the experience of advanced industrialized countries, social policies are portrayed as responses to the crises of capitalist industrialization. But this claim cannot explain the development of social policies, albeit limited in scope, in African countries in the early postcolonial era where...

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Main Author: Michael Kpessa-Whyte
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: Elsevier 2021-07-01
Series:Scientific African
Online Access:http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468227621001320
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spelling doaj-41008d7b0daf455194e7b8fa2f1b40942021-08-04T04:20:23ZengElsevierScientific African2468-22762021-07-0112e00828Transformative public policy design? The lifeworld of early postcolonial social policy in GhanaMichael Kpessa-Whyte0Corresponding author.; Institute of African Studies, University of Ghana, Legon, Accra, GhanaBased on the experience of advanced industrialized countries, social policies are portrayed as responses to the crises of capitalist industrialization. But this claim cannot explain the development of social policies, albeit limited in scope, in African countries in the early postcolonial era where policy makers undertook ambitious social development programs although their countries were comparatively underdeveloped. This article examines the approach to socio-economic development in the early postcolonial era (1950s to mid 1960s) in Ghana and argues that policymakers at the time adopted a transformative view of social policy and used it strategically as an integral part of modernization efforts to serve multiple purposes simultaneously. Consequently, social programs such as education and health were conceptualized as essential for human and societal progress hence, they were provided on the basis of social citizenship, whereas other such as old age income security and housing were designed to address new vulnerabilities that arise when a person is disconnected from traditional support systems due to processes of social change.http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468227621001320
collection DOAJ
language English
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Michael Kpessa-Whyte
spellingShingle Michael Kpessa-Whyte
Transformative public policy design? The lifeworld of early postcolonial social policy in Ghana
Scientific African
author_facet Michael Kpessa-Whyte
author_sort Michael Kpessa-Whyte
title Transformative public policy design? The lifeworld of early postcolonial social policy in Ghana
title_short Transformative public policy design? The lifeworld of early postcolonial social policy in Ghana
title_full Transformative public policy design? The lifeworld of early postcolonial social policy in Ghana
title_fullStr Transformative public policy design? The lifeworld of early postcolonial social policy in Ghana
title_full_unstemmed Transformative public policy design? The lifeworld of early postcolonial social policy in Ghana
title_sort transformative public policy design? the lifeworld of early postcolonial social policy in ghana
publisher Elsevier
series Scientific African
issn 2468-2276
publishDate 2021-07-01
description Based on the experience of advanced industrialized countries, social policies are portrayed as responses to the crises of capitalist industrialization. But this claim cannot explain the development of social policies, albeit limited in scope, in African countries in the early postcolonial era where policy makers undertook ambitious social development programs although their countries were comparatively underdeveloped. This article examines the approach to socio-economic development in the early postcolonial era (1950s to mid 1960s) in Ghana and argues that policymakers at the time adopted a transformative view of social policy and used it strategically as an integral part of modernization efforts to serve multiple purposes simultaneously. Consequently, social programs such as education and health were conceptualized as essential for human and societal progress hence, they were provided on the basis of social citizenship, whereas other such as old age income security and housing were designed to address new vulnerabilities that arise when a person is disconnected from traditional support systems due to processes of social change.
url http://www.sciencedirect.com/science/article/pii/S2468227621001320
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