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Smugglers Secessionists & Loyal Citizens: On The Ghana-Togo Frontier (Western African Studies)
 
 
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Smugglers Secessionists & Loyal Citizens: On The Ghana-Togo Frontier (Western African Studies) [Hardcover]

Paul Nugent (Author)

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Book Description

Western African Studies January 15, 2003
The current border between Ghana and Togo is usually regarded as a classically arbitrary European construct, resisted by Ewe irredentism. Paul Nugent challenges this conventional wisdom, contending that whatever the origins of partition, border peoples quickly became knowing and active participants in the shaping of this international boundary. This book straddles the conventional divide between social and political history. It offers a reconstruction of a long-range history of smuggling and a reappraisal of Ewe identity. It should be of interest to African historians, political scientists, anthropologists, comparative borderlands scholars and others concerned with issues of criminality, identity and the state. North America: Ohio U Press
--This text refers to the Paperback edition.

Editorial Reviews

Review

This study...is warmly recommended and should be of particular interest to those concerned with the ins and outs of imaginary or putative nationalisms in Africa. From a comparative perspective, it would be very interesting to see to what extent Nugent's four main conclusions - that boundary lines drawn by the various colonial powers were never simply arbitrary, that those boundary lines created local sets of vested interests favouring the status quo, that the division of a putative ethnic group (the Ewe) was not sufficient to override the forces conspiring towards maintenance of the border and, finally, that contra a particularly well-established orthodoxy, Ewe border communities in both countries have neither been divorced from the state, nor especially resistant to it - have wider currency beyond the Ghana-Togo context. - Jeffrey Haynes in AFRICA This highly nuanced study examines the rich borderland communities of the Ghana Togo frontier from WWI to the present, focusing on the Ghanaian side. Nugent (Univ of Edinburgh) argues that although Europeans drew the boundaries, they owe more to precolonial economic and ethnic patterns than previously recognized. ...Although Europeans devised the border, the indigenous population embraced it and made it their own. For smugglers, the border represented less an artificial barrier imposed by outsiders than an opportunity for profit. Based on extensive archival research and oral interviews, this book will interest social and political historians, anthropologists, and political scientists. - E.S. Schmidt in CHOICE ... this book is an important contribution to our knowledge of the creation of African frontier zones and the role of frontiers in the evolution of borderland communities, about which so little is known. Nugent's conclusions are as striking as they are original: African colonial boundaries were not arbitrary, but a function of European and local African attitudes; these boundaries created local sets of vested interests (smuggling associations, for example), that championed the status quo as colonial administration waned and independence movements waxed; expressions of ethnicity along border zones were as much a refraction of identity politics at a local level as they were of emerging ethnically based nationalist movements. And ... border communities are not divorced from, or resistant to, the state.- Benjamin N. Lawrence in AFRICAN STUDIES REVIEW --This text refers to the Paperback edition.

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