About

Charles Essel is a senior lecturer at the Department of Architecture, Kwame Nkrumah University for Science and Technology, Kumasi, Ghana. He holds a Masters Degree in Architecture from St. Petersburg State University of Architectural & Civil Engineering – St. Petersburg, Russia. Currently, he is the year coordinator for 2nd Year Architectural Design Studio at the Department of Architecture, KNUST. Since the year 2000, his teaching activities has centered on Design in the Rural Environment, Urban Design, Housing and Landscape Architecture, Common Structural Systems, Representation Techniques and structural optimization.As an architect and a lecturer, his major research interest is in indoor environmental quality, advanced structural materials and systems, architectural education, urban design and planning, cultural sustainability through integration of architectural science and cultural heritage, housing and neighbourhood design.He is an Associate member of the Ghana Institute of Architects. Being a practising architect, he has worked on several architectural projects both locally and internationally. He has led the design of a logistics warehouse in Lagos, Nigeria and has also been on the design and consultancy team of a number of projects executed by Safi Sana Ghana Limited (Dutch NGO), Korean International Coorperation Agency as well as GoG projects funded by the World Bank.

Research Summary

(inferred from publications by AI)

The researcher investigates the nuanced ways in which human behavior and societal structures influence outcomes across diverse social sciences areas, including entrepreneurship, international aid, efficiency analysis, financial systems, cultural practices, education policy, and individual decision-making. Each paper explores how factors like knowledge, perception, financial constraints, cultural practices, and educational policies impact behaviors such as entrepreneurial intent, agricultural nutrition, financial inclusion, legacy of entrepreneurship, and human behavior in different contexts.

Research Themes

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.