Haggling over graves and shrines: The intersection of archaeology, the community, and dam authorities at the Bui dam area in Ghana
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
This article discusses the important roles that archaeologists can play in
development projects that affect the history and culture of indigenous
people who live around a project site. It discusses the salvage
archaeology that was done at one site, the Bui hydro-electric dam in
Ghana, even though dam authorities refused, at first, to allow it. The
article discusses how, through salvage work, archaeologists became
cultural brokers and successfully mediated the ‘conflict’ between the
Bui Dam Authority (BPA) and the affected communities. Community
members were threatening not to relocate until their shrines and
ancestral burials were relocated, which could have disrupted the
construction activities of the dam and the project schedule. The
relocation of the shrines and the burials revealed the importance of
community spaces shared by the dead and the living, and showed how
essential it is to be physically and spiritually invested in life and death.
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Research Article