1. Addai, I. (2000). Religious Affiliation and Sexual Initiation among Ghanaian Women. Review of Religious Research, 41, 328–343.
2. Adinkrah, M. (2012). Better dead than dishonored: Masculinity and male suicidal behavior in contemporary Ghana. Social Science Medicine, 74(4), 474–481.
3. Agyekum, K. (2010). Akan verbal taboos: In the context of ethnography of communication. Accra: Ghana Universities Press.
4. Ammah, R. (1992). Paradise lies at the feet of Muslim women. In M. A. Oduyoye & M. R. A. Kanyoro (Eds.), The will to arise: Women, tradition and the church in Africa (pp. 74–84). Maryknoll, NY: Orbis Books.
5. Ampofo, A. A. (2006). Intimate bargains: Sex workers and ‘free women’ negotiate their sexual space. In C. Oppong, M. Y. Oppong, & I. Odotei (Eds.), Sex and gender in an era of AIDS: Ghana at the turn of the millennium (pp. 137–169). Accra: Sub Saharan Publishers.