Fr. 178.00

The Political Economy of Policing in Ghana, 1830-2005

Inglese · Copertina rigida

Pubblicazione il 10.09.2025

Descrizione

Ulteriori informazioni

This book is a testament to the importance of historical institutional analysis for understanding the reform of Africa s institutions. As an entry point, Raymond Atuguba examines the regulations of public order and alcohol by the police in Ghana, outlining an interplay of changing ideological and interest formations on the one hand and changing institutional forms on the other. The study reveals not only new forms of oppressive institutional orderings that descend from colonialism; but also new institutional forms that produce possibilities and countervailing technologies of power, capable of meeting and assailing the ways in which the power of post-modern colonialism mobilizes itself.
In sum, this book explores the themes of institutional continuities, hegemonic practices, and institutional reform. It discusses how the British political, economic and legal infrastructure penetrated and disrupted pre-existing regulation of public order and alcohol that was conducive to a particular political economy and various social practices. It emphasizes the enduring character of the new institutions created around public order and alcohol, and how they crystallized at independence and were perpetuated in the post-independence era.

Sommario

Chapter 1. INSTITUTIONAL DYSFUNCTION AND CONTINUITY.- Chapter 2. BO ME KOTOKU .- Chapter 3. POLICING FROM 1900 TO 1957.- Chapter 4. POST-INDEPENDENCE.- Chapter 5. THE POLICE IN THE PERIOD OF POLITICAL AND ECONOMIC.- Chapter 6. THE POLICE FORCE IN THE YEARS OF POLITICAL STABILITY AND.- Chapter 7. THE POLICE IN THE ERA OF POSITIVE CHANGE , 2001 TO 2005.- Chaper 8. AKPETESHIE.- Chapter 9. THE REFORM GAME AND ITS PLAYERS.

Riassunto

This book is a testament to the importance of historical institutional analysis for understanding the reform of Africa’s institutions. As an entry point, Raymond Atuguba examines the regulations of public order and alcohol by the police in Ghana, outlining an interplay of changing ideological and interest formations on the one hand and changing institutional forms on the other. The study reveals not only new forms of oppressive institutional orderings that descend from colonialism; but also new institutional forms that produce possibilities and countervailing technologies of power, capable of meeting and assailing the ways in which the power of post-modern colonialism mobilizes itself.
In sum, this book explores the themes of institutional continuities, hegemonic practices, and institutional reform. It discusses how the British political, economic and legal infrastructure penetrated and disrupted pre-existing regulation of public order and alcohol that was conducive to a particular political economy and various social practices. It emphasizes the enduring character of the new institutions created around public order and alcohol, and how they crystallized at independence and were perpetuated in the post-independence era.

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