Ghanaians in Italy
Total population
Various estimates:
50,414
Regions with significant populations
 Lombardy,  Emilia-Romagna,  Veneto,  Sicily
Languages
Italian, English, French, other languages of Ghana
Religion
Mainly Roman Catholicism, Protestantism
Related ethnic groups
Ghanaians, Ivorians in Italy, Burkinabe in Italy, Togolese in Italy

The presence of Ghanaians in Italy dates back to the 1980s.

Numbers

In 2010 in Italy there are 46,890 regular immigrants from Ghana. In 2006 there were 36,540. The three cities with most number of Ghanaians are: Palermo, Modena and Reggio Emilia.[1]

History

The footballer Mario Balotelli an Italian of Ghanaian descent

In Italy the migration from Ghana began in the mid-1980s, when people came over as students driven by economic motives.

The choice of Italy as a place of destination, it is often due to the ease of obtaining an entry visa, and the difficulty of obtaining an entry permit for other European countries. In fact initially the preferred destinations are Britain, then Netherlands and the United States, but many of them, the first citation is available and has been for Italy. Towards the year 1988 also was easier to get a visa for Italy because there were few immigrants, but Britain was more rigid because many Ghanaians actually entered as tourists stayed permanently. The guys of the second generation who were born in Italy, studying, trying to carve out a space, to achieve a respectable economic independence and parents work very hard to guarantee them a relative stability.

Entrepreneurship

Ghanacoop was born in Modena in 2005 within the National Association of Ghana and it is one of the first non-profit social enterprises run by immigrants on the Italian territory. It's a concrete example of community enterprise, involving an entire community as a whole of its economic activities, social or cultural. The farm, which involves 135 workers cultivating an area of 400 hectares, exports its products to the British market and, through Ghanacoop, on the Italian market. On the local market the product is sold to both distributors of fresh produce, and for firms engaged in processing for the production of juices, fruit concentrates and fruit cut, or, in the Italian business vocabulary, fourth range.[2]

Notable Ghanaians in Italy

References

  1. "Comuni Italiani".
  2. "GhanaCoop". Modena. 2007. Archived from the original on 3 July 2009. Retrieved 1 May 2007.
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