Critique of Political Decolonization
Oxford University Press (Verlag)
978-0-19-887184-2 (ISBN)
What is political independence? As a political act, what was it sanctioned to accomplish? Is formal colonialism over, or a condition in the present, albeit mutated and evolved?
In Critique of Political Decolonization, Bernard Forjwuor challenges what, in normative scholarship, has become a persistent conflation of two different concepts: political decolonization and political independence. This scholarly volume is an antinormative and critical refutation of the decolonial accomplishment of political independence or self-determination in Ghana. He argues that political independence is insufficiently a decolonial claim because it is framed within the context of a country, where a permanent colonial settlement was never deemed necessary for the consolidation of future colonial political obligations. So, while territorial dissolution was politically engineered by Ghanaians, the colonial merely reconstitutes itself in different legal and ideological forms.
Forjwuor offers new methodological, theoretical, and conceptual approaches to engaging the questions of colonialism, political independence, political decolonization, justice, and freedom, and constructs multiple conceptual bridges between traditional disciplinary fields of inquiry including politics, history, law, African studies, economic history, critical theory, and philosophy and political theory. Using the Ghanaian experience as a rich case study, Forjwuor rethinks what colonialism and decolonization mean, and asserts that decolonization is primarily a question of justice.
Bernard Forjwuor is an Assistant Professor of Africana Studies at the University of Notre Dame. He is a scholar of black political thought, and his research focuses on the philosophical, critical, and theoretical claims advanced by global black political thinkers. His recent work challenges the ways the colonial and the racial are routinely affirmed as extinguished in the liberal democratic affirmation of sovereignty.
Preface
Acknowledgments
1: Introduction: Critical Framework
2: Decolonizing Self-Determination: When the Law Conspires Against its Objective
3: On Indirect Rule: Critique of Foundations
4: Mythologies of Political Decolonization: How to Critique the Myth that Forecloses Accounts of the Imperium
5: Critique of Liberal Democracy: When the Sacred is Violated
6: Critique of Colonial Neoliberalism: How Colonialism is Franchised
7: The Constituent Specter of Colonialism: When Death Loses Its Meaning
8: Conclusion: Epistemological Considerations
Bibliography
Erscheinungsdatum | 11.07.2023 |
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Verlagsort | Oxford |
Sprache | englisch |
Maße | 162 x 242 mm |
Gewicht | 628 g |
Themenwelt | Sozialwissenschaften ► Politik / Verwaltung ► Europäische / Internationale Politik |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Politik / Verwaltung ► Politische Theorie | |
Sozialwissenschaften ► Politik / Verwaltung ► Staat / Verwaltung | |
ISBN-10 | 0-19-887184-8 / 0198871848 |
ISBN-13 | 978-0-19-887184-2 / 9780198871842 |
Zustand | Neuware |
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