Vida Yeboah Explained

Office1:Member of parliament for Akwapim South Constituency
Term Start1:7 January 1997
Term End1:6 January 2001
Predecessor1:John Jerry Rawlings
Office2:Member of parliament for Akwapim South Constituency
Term Start2:7 January 1993
Term End2:6 January 1997
President2:John Jerry Rawlings
Birth Date:27 July 1944
Vida Amaadi Yeboah
Birth Place:Akwapim South, Eastern Region Ghana)
Nationality:Ghanaian
Party:National Democratic Congress
Alma Mater:University of Ghana
Occupation:Politician
Profession:Teacher, Civic Leader

Vida Amaadi Yeboah (1944-2006) was a former Ghanaian educator, politician and civic leader.[1] Deputy Minister of Education and Culture from 1988 to 1993, Yeboah helped found the Forum for African Women Educationalists (FAWE) in 1992. Elected member of parliament in 1992, Yeboah became a member of Jerry Rawlings' government, serving as tourism minister from 1997 to 2001.

Early life and education

Vida Yeboah was born on 27 July 1944 at her maternal family village in the Eastern Region, the daughter of Kate Oye Ntow Ofosu and Eric Perigrino Nelson. She was educated at Wesley Girls High School before gaining her BA in French from the University of Ghana. She then studied for a MA in French from the University of Bordeaux in France, and a post-graduate diploma in education from the University of Cape Coast.[2]

She taught for fourteen years at girls schools in Ghana, becoming headmistress of Mfantsiman Girls' Secondary School, before being appointed a Deputy Secretary for Education in 1985.[3]

From 1988 to 1993 Vida Yeboah was Deputy Minister of Education and Culture.[4] Yeboah overhauled the pre-university schooling system, increasing the attendance rates for girls.[5] In 1992 she cofounded the Forum for African Women Educationalists with four other African women ministers of education: Fay Chung in Zimbabwe, Simone Testa in the Seychelles, Paulette Moussavon-Missambo in Gabon, and Alice Tiendrebengo in Burkina Faso.[6]

Politics

Vida was elected to represent Akuapim South in the first parliament of the fourth republic of Ghana on 7 January 1993 after she was pronounced winner at the 1992 Ghanaian parliamentary election held on 29 December 1992.

She was re-elected into the second parliament of the fourth republic after obtaining 48% of the vote at the 1996 elections.[7] She was appointed in 1997 as the Minister of Tourism where she served till 2001, a ministerial position outside the Cabinet.

Awards and recognition

Vida Yeboah is remembered as one of the four founders of Forum for African Women Educationalists (FAWE) Ghana's Chapter.[8]

Sources

Notes and References

  1. Book: Vida Yeboah. Alfonso Gumucio. Dagron. Thomas. Tufte. Communication for Social Change Anthology: Historical and Contemporary Readings. https://books.google.com/books?id=85WbPmx9QlcC&pg=PR11. 2006. CFSC Consortium, Inc.. 978-0-9770357-9-3. 11. Foreword.
  2. http://fawe.org/home/team/vida-amaadi-yeboah-the-late/ The late Vida Amaadi Yeboah
  3. https://books.google.com/books?id=GDAuAQAAIAAJ&q=%22vida+yeboah%22+Mfantsiman New secretaries for education
  4. Web site: Ghana Ministers . 2010-05-31 . 26 January 2010 . Worldwide Guide to Women in Leadership . Martin K.I. Christensen . Martin K.I. Christensen.
  5. Book: Kamene Okonjo. Barbara J.. Nelson. Barbara J. Nelson . Najma Chowdhury . Najma. Chowdhury. Women and Politics Worldwide. https://books.google.com/books?id=ZbqezMA6_SsC&pg=PA294. 1994. Yale University Press. 978-0-300-05408-8. 294. Ghana: Women and the Evolution of a Ghanaian Political Synthesis.
  6. Book: Williams, Hettie V.. Mary Zeiss. Stange . Carol K.. Oyster. Jane E.. Sloan. Encyclopedia of Women in Today's World. https://books.google.com/books?id=bOkPjFQoBj8C&pg=PA581. 2011. SAGE. 978-1-4129-7685-5. 581–582. Forum for African Women Educationalists.
  7. Book: John Larvie. Kwasi Afriyie Badu. Elections in Ghana 1996. 1996. Electoral Commission. 978-9988-572-49-5. 136.
  8. Web site: About FAWE Ghana. www.fawegh.org. 2016-10-27.