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Overview
Product Details
ISBN-13: | 9780253059970 |
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Publisher: | Indiana University Press (Ips) |
Publication date: | 07/12/2022 |
Pages: | 598 |
Product dimensions: | 6.00(w) x 9.00(h) x 1.50(d) |
Age Range: | 18 Years |
About the Author
Table of Contents
AcknowledgmentList of AbbreviationsPrologueIntroductionPart I. The Volta River Project1. The Volta Project and the Promise of Modernization2. "Nkrumah's Baby": Realizing Akosombo within the Cold WarPart II. The Volta Aluminium Company3. Volta Aluminium Company: A U.S. Outpost in West Africa4. Working on VALCO's American IslandPart III. Settlements of Modernization5. "No One Should Be Worse Off": Resettlement6. Building the City of the FuturePart IV. Power Struggles7. Waiting for Light: Stories of Rural Electrification8. Electricity Politics, Droughts, Self-HelpEpilogueNotesBibliographyIndexWhat People are Saying About This
In A Dam for Africa, Stephan Miescher explores the history of Akosombo Dam, its role as part of the broader Volta River Project, and its influence on national and pan-African visions for a postcolonial technological future. Miescher draws on a large body of previously underutilized archival sources, as well as extensive interviews with government officials and citizens across regions most directly impacted by the construction of the dam and the resulting resettlement that came in its wake
A Dam for Africa is a truly spectacular contribution to global debates about energy justice. Rather than eschewing the contradictions of sustainable development, Miescher explores them with tremendous sensitivity and subtlety. The result is a rich, complex, innovative history that changes the terms of scholarship across a wide range of fields, including African history, global environmental history, the history of technology, and infrastructure studies.
Based on meticulous archival research carried out across the globe and on countless interviews, A Dam for Africa engages themes as diverse as decolonization, gender, technology, and popular culture in this riveting account of the making of Ghana's Akosombo Dam. Miescher's rich, multiscalar analysis is as adept at reconstructing the Cold War geopolitics of aid and development that form the negotiated prehistory of the dam, as it is at recounting the personal stories of displacement, relocation, and disillusionment of ordinary women and men whose livelihoods and homes, burial grounds, and religious sites were washed away by the Volta Lake. Miescher's A Dam for Africa is quite simply a monumental work.
A Dam for Africa is a stunningly rich examination of Ghana's Volta River Project, an ambitious infrastructural / development scheme that has played a central role in 20th century Ghanaian and African, history. At its core, the book probes the multiple meanings that the project's principle manifestation—the hydroelectric Akosombo Dam—had for Ghanaians, Africans, local bureaucrats, international governments, and transnational business interests from c. 1950 to 2010, a sixty-year period that stretches across not only the colonial / postcolonial divide, but several periods of ranging political ideologies, economic realities, and international transformations.