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Akosua Baah Kwarteng Amaka-Otchere

Planning

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About

Akosua B.K. Amaka-Otchere is a Lecturer at the Department of Planning, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology, Kumasi (KNUST). She has over eighteen years working experience in various development related fields as a development planner and researcher and in a number of voluntary endeavours. Her professional engagements have been in the form of development research, monitoring, evaluation, project implementation and management, development policy analysis principally in development fields of  Energy, Environment, Governance and Gender as well in Regional and Urban planning.  She specialised in Development Planning and Energy for her Doctorate degree. She has consulted for both national and international organisations including the Ministry of Planning (Ghana), Institute of Local Government Studies (ILGS) (Ghana), German Technical Cooperation (GIZ), African Development Bank, the German Bank for Development (KfW), Katholische Soziale Akademie-Germany, the World Bank, and assisted in consultation for a number of development agencies including United Nations Development Programme (UNDP), United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), European Union (EU), ACTION AID, JICA, Shell Foundation, and the Dutch Ministry of Foreign Affairs.Some of the key assignments she has recently been involved in include the development of training manuals for national planners for the erstwhile Ministry of Planning, Ghana (now under the oversight of the National Development Planning Commission, Ghana), and leading a 2-year transdisciplinary research project on household energy efficiency in Ghana with funding from the International Science Council, the Network of African Science Academies and the Swedish Development Agency under the Leading Integrated Research Africa 2030 programme.She is adept in both quantitative and qualitative research, analysis and presentation with extensive skills in statistical analysis using SPSS software; presentations in the form of documentaries; and stakeholder consultative, engagement and evidence uptake processes. She is also trained in transdisciplinary research (TDR). She is fluent in the English language, fairly fluent in German, and has working knowledge of two Ghanaian languages. She holds a doctorate degree in Development Planning and Energy from the Technische Universität Dortmund, Germany.Akosua is currently the Programme Coordinator for the MSc/MPhil Planning, Monitoring and Evaluation, under the Department of Planning and hosted by the Institute of Distance Learning, KNUST. She is also a service lecturer for M&E for MSc Project Management Programme for the Department of Construction Management, KNUST. Further, she is member of the Scientific Committee for the Women in Science, Technology, Engineering and Math-KNUST (WiSTEMGh) and a Mentor for the same and supported the WiSTEMGh/Millenium Development Authority (MiDA) Ghana Power Compact Internship and Mentoring Program.

Research Summary

(inferred from publications by AI)

The researcher focuses on examining the interplay between socio-economic systems, environmental factors, and governance mechanisms in developing regions such as Ghana. Their work spans areas like sustainability practices, educational opportunities, energy transitions, climate impacts, land use, and social movements, aiming to understand how individual and collective actions shape socio-economic outcomes in these contexts.

Research Themes

All Papers

Facilitating Urban Sustainability through Transdisciplinary (TD) Research: Lessons from Ghana, South Africa, and Zimbabwe(2021)
Analyzing the contributions of transdisciplinary research to the global sustainability agenda in African cities(2021)
Effect of Parental Socio-Economic Status on the Performance of Senior High School Students in the Sefwi Wiawso Municipality in Ghana(2023)
Livelihood security in urban slums in Ghana: evidence from the Kumasi Metropolis(2023)
Shades of informality: taxonomy and operational characteristics of informal economic activities in central Kumasi, Ghana(2023)
Locational factors for local revenue mobilisation in a Peri-urban municipal area around Accra, Ghana(2024)
Decentralised options für energy supply for sustainable economic development in rural Ghana(2014)
Encouraging household energy conservation through transdisciplinary approaches in Ghana and South Africa: assumptions, challenges and guidelines(2023)
Triggers of electricity-use efficiency amongst low-income households in Kumasi, Ghana(2023)
Toward sustainable energy transition: understanding electricity-use behavior among low-income urban households in Kumasi(2024)
Extending the boundaries of the value-belief-norm theory to off-farm livelihood preferences – Perceptions of food crop farmers in the savanna ecological zone, Ghana(2024)
Multi-dimensional Evaluation of the Effects of Climate Change on Rural Livelihoods in Northern Ghana—The Case of Builsa North District(2024)
Local government revenue mobilisation: assessing property rate management potential of peri-urban districts using geospatial technologies(2024)
Nuances of informal transport operation(2025)

Collaboration Network

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About This Profile

This profile is generated from publicly available publication metadata and is intended for research discovery purposes. Themes, summaries, and trajectories are inferred computationally and may not capture the full scope of the lecturer's work. For authoritative information, please refer to the official KNUST profile.