An imaginary line? Decolonisation, bordering and borderscapes on the Ghana–Togo border
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
Africa’s inherited colonial borders have been central in debates on
decolonisation for reasons that include challenges posed to African
mobilities and identities, suggesting that there is a crisis of ideas about
the border. This article draws on critical border studies (CBS) to examine
the agency and negotiating capabilities of border residents using
Leklebi and Wli, on the Ghana–Togo border, as case studies. How are
discourses and practices of the border embedded in the contemporary
everyday life of the borderland residents? What do their bordering practices reveal about their borderscapes? Are borderscapes being created
or negotiated dependent on context? It argues that in these borderlands, borderscapes and bordering are conceived and expressed con textually not only through the lens of the postcolonial territorial border
but also through the precolonial migration histories as well as precolonial concepts of political space. It contributes to border studies by highlighting the importance of historical and cultural factors in bordering
and borderscapes. An understanding of such complexities may, in a
significant way, help us to rethink or reconsider the arbitrariness of
borders.
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Research Article