Thilde Langevang
Associate Professor
Om
My Research
My research explores the intersections of entrepreneurship, livelihoods, and socio-economic change in the Global South, with a focus on youth and women in Africa. I study how individuals and communities navigate precarity, resource scarcity, and institutional constraints, and how these challenges shape both everyday livelihood practices and longer-term entrepreneurial aspirations. With a background in human geography, I examine how place and space influence entrepreneurship, and how entrepreneurs in turn shape their environments. While my work often begins at the micro-level, emphasizing agency and resilience, I also analyze how livelihoods and entrepreneurship are embedded in wider socio-economic and institutional dynamics operating at different scales. My research builds on fieldwork in Ghana, Uganda, and Tanzania and draws on interviews and participatory, visual and arts-based qualitative methods. Collaboration is central to my research approach: I work closely with African scholars, communities, and policymakers to co-create knowledge and foster meaningful impact on practice and policy.
Publications
See all publications4. september 2025
Ghana’s Films Don’t Often Make It to Netflix
Local Solutions May Be the Answer
Go to publicationjuli 2025
The Relational and Redistributive Dynamics of Mutual Aid
Implications of Afro-Communitarian Ethics for the Study of Creative Work
Go to publication26. juni 2025
"Squeezing Money Out of a Rock"
Diverse Economies of Contemporary Theatre in Ghana
Rashida Resario
Thilde Langevang, Associate Professor