Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-l7hp2 Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-03T00:29:30.988Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

‘Unity for Development’ youth associations in north-western Ghana

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2011

Résumé

Depuis le milieu des années 70, de nombreuses associations pour le développement et pour la jeunesse, avec une adhésion basée sur l'affiliation à un territoire particulier, ou sur une affiliation ethnique, ont été fondées dans le nord du Ghana. Bien que celles-ci soient devenues des agents importants dans plusieurs arènes politiques, elles n'ont pas encore suscité un intérêt de la part des chercheurs—un manque que cet article cherche à combler en examinant l'histoire des associations, l'image qu'elles donnent d'ellesmêmes, leurs organisations internes et politiques aussi bien que leurs dynamiques culturelles.

Prenant l'exemple du nord-ouest, certains problèmes typiques qui confrontent les associations pour la jeunesse font l'objet d'une discussion détaillée, par exemple, les conflits qui ont surgit après avoir créé et delimité la communaute dont l'association se dit représenter les intérêts au monde extérieur (les frontières territoriales contre les frontières ethniques), et les problèmes qu'il y a eu en définissant le concept d'adhésion (automatique contre volontaire), qui reflète les tensions entre la communauté et l'organisation, entre le peuple et l'élite éduquée.

Parce que ces problèmes pourraient menacer la survie même des associations, elles utilisent une proportion considérable de leur énergie en devenant un mouvement «d'identité», transformant un groupe hétérogène de la population en une communautenauté. Les discours, les symboles et les rituels se rapportant à ce niveau d'action de la part des associations pour la jeunesse sont analysés dans la dernière section de l'article.

Type
Organising development in the West African savanna
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 1995

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Acquah, Ioné. 1958. Accra Survey. London: University of London Press.Google Scholar
Allman, Jean Marie. 1993. The Quills of the Porcupine: Asante nationalism in an emergent Ghana. Madison, Wis.: University of Wisconsin Press.Google Scholar
Austin, Dennis. 1976. ‘A northern contest’, in Ghana Observed, pp. 140–50. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Barkan, Joel, McNulty, Michael and Ayeni, M. A. O. 1991. ‘“Hometown” voluntary associations, local development and the emergence of civil society in western Nigeria ’, Journal of Modem African Studies 29 (3), 457–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bening, Raymond. 1975a. ‘Foundations of the modern native states of northern Ghana’, Universitas, 5 (1), 116–38.Google Scholar
Bening, Raymond. 1975b. ‘Location of district administrative capitals in the Northern Territories of the Gold Coast, 1897–1951’, Bulletin de l'Institut Fondamental d'Afrique Noire 37, series B (3), 646–66.Google Scholar
Bening, Raymond. 1990. A History of Education in Northern Ghana, 1907–76. Accra: University of Ghana Press.Google Scholar
Busia, Kofi A. 1950. Report on a Social Survey of Sekondi-Takoradi. London: Crown Agents.Google Scholar
Chauveau, Jean-Pierre. 1992. ‘Du populisme bureaucratique dans l'histoire institutionelle du développement rurale en Afrique de l'Ouest’, Bulletin de l'APAD 4.Google Scholar
Chazan, Naomi. 1974. ‘Politics and Youth Organisations in Ghana and the Ivory Coast’. Ph.D. thesis, Jerusalem: Hebrew University.Google Scholar
Cohen, Jean L. 1985. ‘Strategy of identity: new theoretical paradigms and contemporary social movements’, Social Research 52 (4), 663716.Google Scholar
Dougah, J. C. 1966. Wa and its People. Legon: Institute of African Studies.Google Scholar
Evans, Philip A. 1983. ‘The LoBirifor-Gonja Dispute in Northern Ghana: a study of interethnic political conflict in a post-colonial state’. Ph.D. thesis, Cambridge: Cambridge University.Google Scholar
Gandah, S. W. D. K. 1992. ‘The Silent Rebel: an autobiography’. Unpublished MS. London.Google Scholar
Goody, Jack. 1954. The Ethnography of the Northern Territories of the Gold Coast, West of the White Volta. London: Colonial Office.Google Scholar
Goody, Jack. 1956. The Social Organisation of the LoWiili. London: HMSO.Google Scholar
Grindal, Bruce T. 1972. Growing up in Two Worlds: education and transition among the Sisala of northern Ghana. New York: Holt Rinehart & Winston.Google Scholar
Hamilton, Ruth. 1966. ‘Urban Social Differentiation and Membership Recruitment among Selected Voluntary Associations in Accra, Ghana’. Ph.D. thesis, Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University.Google Scholar
Hannigan, John A. 1985. ‘Alain Touraine, Manuel Castells and social movement theory: a critical appraisal’, Sociological Quarterly 26 (4), 435–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Harris, David. 1983. ‘Central power and local reform: Ghana during the 1970s’, in Mawhood, Philip (ed.), Local Government in the Third World: the experience of tropical Africa, pp. 201–23. Chichester: Wiley.Google Scholar
Haynes, Jeff. 1991. ‘The PNDC and political decentralisation in Ghana, 1981–91’, Journal of Commonwealth and Comparative Politics 29 (3), 283307.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Japp, Klaus. 1984. ‘Selbsterzeugung oder Fremdverschulden. Thesen zum Rationalismus in den Theorien sozialer Bewegungen’, Soziale Welt 35 (3), 313–29.Google Scholar
Kraus, Jon Peter. 1971. ‘Cleavages, Crises, Parties and State Power in Ghana: the emergence of a single-party system’. PhD thesis, Baltimore, Md.: Johns Hopkins University.Google Scholar
Kuklick, Henrika. 1979. The Imperial Bureaucrat: the colonial administrative service in the Gold Coast, 1920–39. Stanford, Cal: Hoover Institution.Google Scholar
Kuklick, Henrika. 1991. The Savage Within: the social history of British anthropology, 1885–1945. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ladouceur, Paul A. 1979. Chiefs and Politicians: the politics of regionalism in northern Ghana. London: Longman.Google Scholar
Carola, Lentz. 1993. ‘Histories and political conflict: a case study of chieftaincy in Nandom, north-western Ghana’, Paideuma 39,. 177215.Google Scholar
Lentz, Carola. 1994a. ‘Home, death and leadership—discourses of an educated elite from north-western Ghana’, Social Anthropology 2 (2), 149–69.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lentz, Carola. 1994b. ‘A Dagara rebellion against Dagomba rule? Contested stories of origin in north-western Ghana’, Journal of African History 35, 457–92.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lentz, Carola. 1994c. ‘Staatlich verordneter “self-help spirit” versus lokale “self-reliance”. Regionale Kulturfestivals in Ghana als politische Arenen’, in Bollig, Michael and Klees, Frank (edş.); Überlebensstrategien in Afrika, pp. 293316. Cologne: Heinrich-Barth-Institut.Google Scholar
Lentz, Carola. 1994d. ‘Colonial and postcolonial constructions of ethnic identity in northwestern Ghana’, African Studies 53 (2), 5791.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lentz, Carola, and Erlmann, Veit. 1989. ‘A working class in formation? Economic crisis and strategies of survival among Dagara mine workers in Ghana’, Cahiers d'Études Africaines XXIX (1), 69111.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Little, Kenneth. 1965. West African Urbanization: a study of voluntary associations in social change. London: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Morgan, Gareth. 1986. Images of Organization. Beverley Hills, Cal.: Sage.Google Scholar
Oppen, Achim von, and Rottenburg, Richard, (eds.). 1995. Organisationswandel in Afrika. Kollektive Praxis und kulturelle Aneignung. Berlin: Das Arabische Buch.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Peel, J. D. Y. 1983. Ijeshas and Nigerians: the incorporation of a Yoruba kingdom, 1890s–1970s. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar
Ranger, Terence. 1993. ‘The invention of tradition revisited: the case of colonial Africa’, in: Ranger, Terence and Vaughan, Olufemi (eds.), Legitimacy and the State in Twentieth-century Africa, pp. 62111. London: Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rothchild, Donald. 1980. ‘Military regime peformance: an appraisal of the Ghana experience’, Comparative Politics 12, 459–79.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Saaka, Yakubu. 1978. Local Government and Political Change in Northern Ghana. Washington, D.C.: University of America Press.Google Scholar
Sautoy, Peter du. 1958. Community Development in Ghana. London: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Schiffer, Harriet B. 1970. ‘Local administration and national development: fragmentation and centralization in Ghana’, Canadian Journal of African Studies IV (1), 5775.Google Scholar
Skalnik, Peter. 1989. ‘Outwitting Ghana: pluralism of political culture in Nanum’, in Skalnik, Peter (ed.), Outwitting the State pp. 145–68. London: Transaction.Google Scholar
Smock, Audrey C. 1971. Ibo Politics: the role of ethnic unions in eastern Nigeria. Cambridge, Mass.: Harvard University Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trager, Lilian. 1993. ‘New Wine in Old Bottles: community day celebrations and the home towns’.Paper presented at the Institute for Advanced Study and Research in the African Humanities, Evanston, Ill.: Northwestern University.Google Scholar
Twumasi, Yaw. 1975. ‘The 1969 election’, in Austin, Dennis and Luckman, Robin (eds.), Politicians and Soldiers in Ghana, 1966–1972, pp. 140–63. London: Frank Cass.Google Scholar
Wallerstein, Immanuel. 1964. ‘Voluntary associations’, in Coleman, James and Rosberg, Carl G. (eds.), Political Parties and National Integration in Tropical Africa, pp. 318–39. Berkeley; Cal.: University of California Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilks, Ivor. 1989. Wa and the Wala: Islam and polity in north-western Ghana. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press.Google Scholar