Professional Summary
I am a labour and economic systems researcher-practitioner and the founder of The Bentum Institute for Labour & Economic Systems CIC, an independent diagnostics organisation focused on decision-risk, workforce resilience, and institutional stress within complex labour and economic systems.
My work sits at the intersection of labour markets, public policy, trade union practice, and institutional governance. Through union engagement and frontline worker representation, I have developed deep practical insight into how economic risk is absorbed by workers when systems fail to translate recognised problems into timely, owned decisions. This experience continues to shape my analytical approach to labour protection, income-shock exposure, and workforce stability.
Alongside my union work, I maintain a strong focus on Ghana and wider African labour and economic contexts, examining how structural vulnerability, informal labour exposure, and weak decision architecture amplify economic shocks. My work emphasises institutional design, risk governance, and early-warning recognition rather than post-crisis response.
Through the Bentum Institute, I develop diagnostic frameworks and research-aligned methodologies that examine where recognised risks stall before decisions are formally owned. This work is diagnostic, not prescriptive. I do not design interventions, implement programmes, or assign responsibility. Engagements, where they occur, are time-bounded, non-operational, and conclude at analytical insight.
My work has been recognised through awards and commendations linked to equality, workforce advocacy, and applied social research, and I continue to combine academic study with applied diagnostic work across labour, governance, and economic resilience.
Across all settings, my focus remains consistent: understanding why risk is recognised but not acted upon, and how decision architecture shapes outcomes for workers, institutions, and economies.



