Village Work - Alice Wiemers

Village Work

Development and Rural Statecraft in Twentieth-Century Ghana

(Autor)

Buch | Softcover
250 Seiten
2021
Ohio University Press (Verlag)
978-0-8214-2466-7 (ISBN)
37,40 inkl. MwSt
This detailed and groundbreaking history of rural Ghanaian statecraft details the crucial importance that local village development systems have on regional and national scales.
A robust historical case study that demonstrates how village development became central to the rhetoric and practice of statecraft in rural Ghana.

Combining oral histories with decades of archival material, Village Work formulates a sweeping history of twentieth-century statecraft that centers on the daily work of rural people, local officials, and family networks, rather than on the national governments and large-scale plans that often dominate development stories. Wiemers shows that developmentalism was not simply created by governments and imposed on the governed; instead, it was jointly constructed through interactions between them.

The book contributes to the historiographies of development and statecraft in Africa and the Global South by

emphasizing the piecemeal, contingent, and largely improvised ways both development and the state are comprised and experiencedproviding new entry points into longstanding discussions about developmental power and discourseunsettling common ideas about how and by whom states are madeexposing the importance of unpaid labor in mediating relationships between governments and the governedshowing how state engagement could both exacerbate and disrupt inequitiesDespite massive changes in twentieth-century political structures—the imposition and destruction of colonial rule, nationalist plans for pan-African solidarity and modernization, multiple military coups, and the rise of neoliberal austerity policies—unremunerated labor and demonstrations of local leadership have remained central tools by which rural Ghanaians have interacted with the state. Grounding its analysis of statecraft in decades of daily negotiations over budgets and bureaucracy, the book tells the stories of developers who decided how and where projects would be sited, of constituents who performed labor, and of a chief and his large cadre of educated children who met and shaped demands for local leaders. For a variety of actors, invoking “the village” became a convenient way to allocate or attract limited resources, to highlight or downplay struggles over power, and to forge national and international networks.

Alice Wiemers is an assistant professor of history at Davidson College. Her work has appeared in the Journal of African History, World Development, and International Labor and Working-Class History.

List of Illustrations

Acknowledgments

Introduction Villages and States in Twentieth-Century Ghana

Chapter 1 Labor, Chieftaincy, and Colonial Statecraft

Chapter 2 Statecraft and Village Development in “Nkrumah’s Time”

Chapter 3 Labor and Statecraft in a Chiefly Family

Chapter 4 Improvising Government in the Granary of Ghana, 1966–81

Chapter 5 Project Village: Government by Village Work, 1982–92

Epilogue

Notes

Bibliography

Index

Erscheinungsdatum
Reihe/Serie New African Histories
Verlagsort Athens
Sprache englisch
Maße 152 x 229 mm
Themenwelt Geisteswissenschaften Geschichte Regional- / Ländergeschichte
Geschichte Teilgebiete der Geschichte Wirtschaftsgeschichte
Sozialwissenschaften Soziologie Spezielle Soziologien
ISBN-10 0-8214-2466-1 / 0821424661
ISBN-13 978-0-8214-2466-7 / 9780821424667
Zustand Neuware
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