Challenges to British Policy of Direct Taxation among the Northern Ewes of Ghana
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Ghana Social Science Journal
Abstract
Taxation is important in analysing the colonial economy and the functions
of the colonial state. Historians often imagine a highly oppressive state
forcing people to pay tax. But in the Ewedome region, the colonial
administrators appeared weak. They were reluctant to push direct
taxation too hard because they wanted to keep the peace and avoid
protests or violent responses. This article extends the discussion of local
influence on colonial policy to the little examined topic of taxation. It
identifies what is special about Ewedome and describes how direct
taxation was introduced, the concerns of administrators and reactions of
the local people, and argues that this enables us to draw some important
conclusions about the gendered and generational nature of responses to
taxation and the surprising weakness of the colonial state.
Description
Ghana Social Science Journal, 12(2), 1-34