Ghana’s demand for restitution of material artifacts: a decolonial reflection
Date
2024
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Identiries
Abstract
This paper incisively engages with the ways in which African leaders
are not assertively demanding restitution of their material artifacts
dispossessed in the eras of enslavement and colonization. It ques tions indigenous people’s struggles for restitution of materialities
colonially dispossessed beyond a simplistic view of decentering
their hierarchy and ownership. Besides, the paper critically inter rogates why Euro-America scholarship generously offers resilience
discourse as perhaps the most important conceptual addition to
international policy making in the last few decades to Africa, but it
ironically does not care to restitute dispossessed material artifacts
back to indigenous African peoples. The paper argues that colonial
dispossession is about recentering indigenous people as masters
and owners of material artifacts via restitution. Using coloniality of
dispossession/theft this paper proposes a framework of restitution
that aims to address resilient colonial dispossession enacted by the
West. It is pointed out that decolonization will be achievable
through restitution of indigenous material artifacts. I engage in
the topic of restitution of material artifacts, particularly in the con text of Asante people of Ghana. The paper contends that restitution
of dispossessed material artifacts would empower indigenous peo ples in Africa and strategically position them in global geopolitics
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Decolonization;, Asante people, artifacts