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Eugenia Date-Bah

From Wikipedia, the free encyclopedia

Eugenia Date-Bah was a Ghanaian academic and author. She was a member of the Sociology department of the University of Ghana.[1] She was elected fellow of the Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences in 2005.[2] Date-Bah once served as the Director of InFocus, an International Labour Organization programme that focused on crises response and reconstruction, she also once served as the manager of the International Labour Organization's Action Programme for equipping countries emerging from armed conflicts with skills and entrepreneurial training.[3]

Eugenia Date-Bah is the wife of Samuel Kofi Date-Bah, a jurist.[4]

Works

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  • Female and Male Factory Workers in Accra (in Christine Oppong's Female and Male in West Africa), (1982);[5]
  • Sustainable Peace After War: Arguing the Need for Major Development in Conflict programming, (1996);[6][7]
  • Jobs After War: A Critical Challenge in the Peace and Reconstruction Puzzle, (2003);[8]
  • Lest We Forget: Insights Into the Kenya's Post Election Violence (with Rita Njau, Rosabelle Boswell), (2008).[9]

References

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  1. ^ Ghana Journal of Sociology. Ghana Sociological Association. 1976.
  2. ^ Sciences, Ghana Academy of Arts and (2006). National Integration. Ghana Academy of Arts and Sciences. ISBN 978-9964-950-27-9.
  3. ^ Manji, Firoze; Burnett, Patrick (2005). African Voices on Development and Social Justice: Editorials from Pambazuka News 2004. Fahamu/Pambazuka. ISBN 978-9987-417-35-3.
  4. ^ "Chairman of University Council Authors Book on the Supreme Court of Ghana | University of Ghana". www.ug.edu.gh. Retrieved 2021-03-09.
  5. ^ Sargent, Carolyn Fishel (2021-01-08). Maternity, Medicine, and Power: Reproductive Decisions in Urban Benin. Univ of California Press. ISBN 978-0-520-36979-5.
  6. ^ Krishna, Kumar (2001). Aftermath, Women and Women's Organizations in Postconflict Societies: The Role of International Assistance. Center for Development Information and Evaluation, U.S. Agency for International Development.
  7. ^ Date-Bah, Eugenia (1996). Sustainable Peace After War: Arguing the Need for Major Integration of Gender Perspectives in Post-conflict Programming. International Labour Office. ISBN 978-92-2-110261-8.
  8. ^ Date-Bah, Eugenia (2003). Jobs After War: A Critical Challenge in the Peace and Reconstruction Puzzle. International Labour Organization. ISBN 978-92-2-113810-5.
  9. ^ Date-Bah, Eugenia; Boswell, Rosabelle; Maundeni, Zibani (2008). Lest We Forget: Insights Into the Kenya's Post Election Violence. Council for the Development of Social Science Research in Africa. ISBN 978-2-86978-215-0.