66 research outputs found
Misrecognition in the making of a state: Ghana’s international relations under Kwame Nkrumah
This paper draws on a Kleinian psychoanalytic reading of Hegel’s theory of the struggle for recognition to explore the role of international misrecognition in the creation of state subjectivity. It focuses on Ghana’s early years, when international relations were powerfully conceptualised and used by Kwame Nkrumah in his bid to bring coherence to a fragile infant state. Nkrumah attempted to create separation and independence from the West on the one hand, and intimacy with a unified Africa on the other. By creating juxtapositions between Ghana and these idealised international others, he was able to create a fantasy of a coherent state, built on a fundamental misrecognition of the wider world. As the fantasy bumped up against the realities of Ghana’s failing economy, fractured social structures and complex international relationships, it foundered, causing alienation and despair. I argue that the failure of this early fantasy was the start of Ghana’s quest to begin processes of individuation and subjectivity, and that its undoing was an inevitable part of the early stages of misrecognition, laying the way for more grounded struggles for recognition and the development of a more complex state-subjectivity
A CHIEFTAINCY DISPUTE AND RITUAL MURDER IN ELMINA, GHANA, 1945–6
Between 6.30 and 7.00 a.m. on Monday morning, 19 March 1945 the body
of a young girl of ten was found on the beach a short distance from the town
of Elmina at a popular bathing spot known as Akotobinsin. According to the
coroner, she had been dead for between 24 and 48 hours. There was no water
in her lungs or stomach which indicated that she had not died by drowning.
Instead, her upper and lower lips, both cheeks, both eyes, her private parts
and anus, and several elliptical pieces of skin from different parts of her body
had been removed. Many of these wounds exposed large blood vessels and
the coroner concluded that ‘death was due to shock and hemorrhage’. She
was identified as Ama Krakraba who had been missing since the evening of
Saturday, 17 March. Her frantic mother had immediately suspected foul
play and had confronted Kweku Ewusie, the Regent of the Edina State, who
was later accused of having ‘enticed’ the young girl to the third floor of
Bridge House, where he lived, ‘by the ruse of sending her out on an errand
to buy tobacco’. There she had been murdered so that her body parts could
be used to make ‘medicine’ to help the Regent's faction win a court case that
was critical for their political standing in Elmina. On the 24 March, after a
preliminary investigation, the colony's attorney-general brought charges of
murder against Kweku Ewusie and four others from Elmina: Joe Smith,
Herbert Krakue, Nana Appram Esson, alias Joseph Bracton Johnson, and
Akodei Mensah. They were tried at the Accra Criminal Assizes from 16 May
to 2 June, found guilty of first degree murder and sentenced to be hanged.
The West African Court of Appeal turned down their appeal on 28 June 1945
as did the Privy Council on 14 January 1946. On 1 February 1946, Kweku
Ewusie, Joe Smith and Herbert Krakue were hanged at James Fort in Accra,
and on 2 February, J. B. Johnson and Akodei Mensah met the same fate.</jats:p
Cooperation among World Area Programs
The task of conducting outreach through NDEA centers has not been
restricted to African centers. From the mid-seventies all such area study
programs funded through Title VI were called upon by the federal government
to undertake some sort of outreach activities. The Office of Education in
its guidelines identified four areas to which such programs should direct
themselves: the business community, the general public, precollegiate
educational institutions, and other universities and junior colleges that
had no NDEA-funded centers.</jats:p
The tribunal system in Ghana's fourth republic: an experiment in judicial reintegration
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