Esther Obeng Dapaah
Esther Obeng Dapaah (wɔwoo no wɔ Kɔtɔnimaa bosome da ɛto so Nkron wɔ Afe Apem Ahankron Aduanan Nnum mu, 9 May 1945) yɛ Ghana[2] ɔmanyɔni ne mmaranimfoɔ. Na ɔyɛ mmarahyɛ badwamni a ɔhwɛ Abirem mpɛsua so wɔ Ghana ammamuo a ɛtɔ so nnan no mmarahyɛ badwa a ɛtɔ so nnum mno mu.[3]
Hon. Esther Obeng Dapaah | |
---|---|
Member of the Ghana Parliament for Abirem | |
Bere 7 January 2008 – 6 January 2013 | |
MP for Abirem | |
Ɔmanpanyin | John Dramani Mahama |
Odikanfo | Muhammad Mumuni |
Minister for Lands Forestry and Mines | |
Bere January 2004 – January 2008 | |
Ɔmanpanyin | John Kufour John Agyekum Kufour |
Odikanfo | Dominic Fobih |
Ne ho asɛm | |
Awo bere | 18 January 1945 |
Ne man | Ghanaian |
Amanyɔkuo | New Patriotic Party |
Mma | 3 |
Sukuu a w'akɔ | Ghana School of Law |
N'adwuma | Lawyer[1] |
Mfitiaseɛ asetena ne ne nwomasua
sesaEsther Obeng Dapaah firi Nkwarten, wɔ Ghana Apueɛ Mantam mu.[4] Wɔwoo no wɔ Kɔtɔnimaa bosome da ɛto so Nkron wɔ Afe Apem Ahankron Aduanan Nnum mu, 9 May 1945.[5] Ɔnyaa ne Mmara mu Bachelor wɔ Chelmer Institute of Education wɔ Essex, England, wɔ afe Apem Ahankron Aduoson Nson (1977).[4] Ɔnyaa Bachelor of Law wɔ Lincoln's Inn wɔ afe Apem Ahankron Aduoson Nwɔtwe (1978) mu na ɔnyaa Ghana School of Law wɔ afe Apem Ahankron Aduoson Nkron (1979).[6][4]
Adwumayɛ
sesaObeng Dapaah yɛ mmaranimfoɔ wɔ adwumayɛ mu.[4] Wayɛ adwuma wɔ London Borough of Newham sɛ Ɔpanin a ɔhwɛ dan ka so.[4]
Amanyɔsɛm
sesaƆyɛ Ɔman Ho Dɔ Kuo Foforo no muni.[6] Ɔsomm wɔ John Agyekum Kufuor ase sɛ Ɔsoafoɔ a ɔhwɛ Asase, Kwaeɛ ne Fam Agudeɛ so.[7][8][9] Wayɛ saa Mmarahyɛ Badwa no muni a ɔhwɛ Abirem mpɛsua so wɔ Ghana ɛfiri mfeɛ Mpem Mmienu ne Nnan (2004) mu. Berɛ bi na ɔyɛ Mmaa ne Mmɔfra Kuo no Titenani na mprempren ɔyɛ Boayikuo a Ɛhwɛ Amansan Mmara ne Mmara Nsɛm So no muni.[10][11][12] Na ɔyɛ Pan-African Mmarahyɛ Badwa no muni nso .
Abatoɔ a wɔyɛ
sesaWɔpaw Obeng Dapaah sɛ mmarahyɛ badwani maa mmarahyɛ badwa a ɛto so nnum a ɛwɔ ammamuo a ɛto so nnan no mu maa Abirem mantam no wɔ mfeɛ Mpem Mmienu ne Nwɔtwe (2008) Ghana amansan abatoɔ mu.[3] Wɔde amma mpem-dumiɛnsa, ahammiɛnsa ne du nkron (13,319) na ɛpaw no wɔ amma Mpem mmienu ne baako, ahankron ne aduosia mmienu (21,962) a ɛfata a wɔtoo no mu, a ɛne abatoɔ a ɛfata a wɔtoo no nyinaa mu ɔha nkyekye mu aduosia akyiri pɔ nsia (60.6%) yɛ pɛ.[4][13]
N'ankasa Abrabɔ
sesaEsther yɛ Kristoni na ɔyɛ Pentekoste Asɔre no muni.[5] Ɔyɛ sigyani a ɔwɔ mma mmiɛnsa.[4]
Mmeaeɛ A Menyaa Mmoa Firiɛ
sesa- ↑ "Ghana MPS - MP Details - Obeng Dappah, Esther (Ms)". ghanamps.gov.gh. Archived from the original on 6 May 2016. Retrieved 12 January 2022.
- ↑ Ghana MPs - MP Details - Obeng Dappah, Esther (Ms), 2016-05-06, archived from the original on 2016-05-06, retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ 3.0 3.1 Results Parliamentary Elections, archived from the original on 2020-10-24, retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ 4.0 4.1 4.2 4.3 4.4 4.5 4.6 Ghana MPs - MP Details - Obeng Dappah, Esther (Ms), 2016-05-06, archived from the original on 2016-05-06, retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ 5.0 5.1 MPs (in American English), retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ 6.0 6.1 Members of Parliament | Parliament of Ghana, 2016-12-01, archived from the original on 2016-12-01, retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ Esther Obeng Dapaah, Minister of Lands, Forestry, and Mines of Ghana, retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ Jason Lindo, Peter Siminski, Isaac Swensen (2015-12), College Party Culture and Sexual Assault, Cambridge, MA, retrieved 2023-10-01
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(help)CS1 maint: multiple names: authors list (link) - ↑ Obeng-Dapaah makes humble demand | Local News, 2016-09-14, archived from the original on 2016-09-14, retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ daniel russell (2015-06-19), Affirmative action policy caused defeat of female MPs – Esther Obeng-Dapaah (in English), retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ Stephen Steinberg (2016-12-26), "The Birth and Death of Affirmative Action", Minority Relations, University Press of Mississippi, pp. 191–218, retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ "RPS awards: 4 September 2016", The Pharmaceutical Journal, 2016, doi:10.1211/pj.2016.20201604, ISSN 2053-6186, retrieved 2023-10-01
- ↑ Frauke Banse (2015), "Wess Brot ich ess, des Lied ich sing? Gewerkschaften in Ghana und Benin und die Förderung der Friedrich-Ebert-Stiftung", Globale Krisen - Lokale Konflikte?, Nomos, pp. 73–92, retrieved 2023-10-01