European University Institute Library

Boundaries, communities and state-making in West Africa, the centrality of the margins, Paul Nugent

Content
1
Mapped to
1
Label
Boundaries, communities and state-making in West Africa, the centrality of the margins, Paul Nugent
Language
eng
Index
index present
Literary form
non fiction
Main title
Boundaries, communities and state-making in West Africa
Medium
electronic resource
Nature of contents
dictionaries
Oclc number
1143282558
Responsibility statement
Paul Nugent
Series statement
African studies seriesCambridge Social Sciences eBooks
Sub title
the centrality of the margins
Summary
Border regions are often considered to be the neglected margins. In this book, Paul Nugent argues that through a comparison of the Senegambia and the trans-Volta (Ghana/Togo), we can see that the geographical margins have shaped notional centres at least as much as the reverse. Through a study of three centuries of history, this book demonstrates that states were forged through an extended process of converting a topography of settled states and slaving frontiers into colonial borders. It argues that post-colonial states and larger social contracts have been configured very differently as a consequence. It underscores the impact on regional dynamics and the phenomenon of peripheral urbanism. Nugent also addresses the manner in which a variegated sense of community has been forged amongst Mandinka, Jola, Ewe and Agotime populations who have both shaped and been shaped by the border. This is an exercise in reciprocal comparison and shuttles between scales, from the local and the particular to the national and the regional.--, Provided by publisher
Table of contents
Centering the margins: states, borderlands and communities -- Configurations of power in comparative perspective: commerce, people and belief to c.1880 -- Port cities, frontiers and boundaries: spatial lineages of the colonial state -- Constructing the compound, keeping the gate: a fiscal anatomy of colonial state-making, c.1900-1940 -- Being seen like a state: frontier logics, colonial administration and traditional authority in the borderlands -- Border regulation and state-making at the margins: taxation, migration and contraband during the interwar years -- Land, belief and belonging in the borderlands -- Bringing the space back in: decolonization, development and territoriality c.1939-1960 -- The vanishing horizon of Senegambian unity: statist visions and border dynamics -- Forging the nation, contesting the border: identity politics and border dynamics in the trans-Volta -- Barnacle states and boundary lines: states, trade and urbanism in the Senegambia -- The remaking of Ghana and Togo at their common border: Alhaji Kalabule meets Nana Benz -- Boundaries, communities and 're-membering': festivals and the negotiation of difference -- Conclusion. Boundaries and state-making: comparisons through time and space

Incoming Resources