DEPARTMENT OF POLITICAL SCIENCE
UNIVERSITY OF GHANA
SECOND SEMESTER, 2012/2013
Lecture Venue: JQB 24 (Fri: 9.30-11.20am)
LECTURER: A. K. D. FREMPONG
Office Location: F20 Kweku Folson Building, Dept. of
Political Science
Office Hours: Monday 7.30-8.30am Friday:
11.30am-1230pm
Email: akdfremppong@ug.edu.gh
Course Title
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POLITICS OF
IDENTITY IN GHANA
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Course Code
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POLI 458
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Purpose and
Objectives
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Identity is a
manifest feature of every society because in terms of politics, religion,
region, ethnicity, gender, age, or socio-economic status, etc, society is
pluralistic with different interests pursued by various groups. Often,
identity groups have antedated the emergence of the modern state system and
have endured in most countries despite policies of assimilation and
integration. The issue becomes even more complicated by the fact that people
have multiple identities and occupy multiple social statuses. How then does a
post-colonial state promote national integration among its citizens within
the context of competing identities? What is the role of the state in the
struggle among the identity groups for the control of political power and
national resources; particularly in the context where the assumption of one
group to power alienates other groups?
This course
analyses the challenges of nation-state building in Ghana; forging a nation
out of the diverse group of people living within its borders. To what extent
have efforts to promote national identity been either promoted or hindered by
competing ethnic, regional and religious identities? What roles have partisan
politics, chieftaincy, women, and youth played in Ghanaian politics? Overall,
how have the interplay of such identities shaped political actions and
alignments in the varying phases of Ghanaian politics?
Upon
completion of this course students should be able to:
· Understand
Identity and how it shapes national politics
· Appreciate
the impact of regionalism and ethnicity on politics in Ghana
· Understand
the roles and dynamics of political party and religion in politics
in Ghana
· Critically
discuss the prospects and challenges of Women and Youth
participation in Ghanaian politics
· Analyze
the role of the institution of chieftaincy In Ghanaian politics
· Contribute
meaningfully to discussions on issues of Identity and
Politics in Ghana
A theoretical
analysis of the concept and forms of identity is followed by their
application in Ghanaian politics since independence, with particular emphasis
on the Fourth Republic
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WEEK NO
|
Date
|
Lecture Course
|
Tutorials
|
Venue
|
Assessment
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1-3
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3-17 Feb 2017
|
Understanding
Politics of Identity
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What is Identity
and how does it affect national politics?
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Lecture: JQB24
Tutorial: DLR
|
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4-6
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24 Feb -10 Mar
2017
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Regionalism
and Ethnicity in Ghanaian Politics
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Challenges of
Regionalism and Ethnicity in Ghana
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Lecture: JQB24
Tutorial: DLR
|
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7-8
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17-24 Mar 2017
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Party Politics
in Ghana
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Dynamics
of Party Politics in Ghana
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Lecture: JQB24
Tutorial: DLR
|
|
9-10
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31 Mar - 7 Apr
2017
|
Women and
Youth in Ghanaian Politics
|
Examine
prospects and challenges
|
Lecture: JQB24
Tutorial: DLR
|
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11-12
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14-21 April 2017
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Chieftaincy
and Politics in Ghana
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Chieftaincy
–State Relations
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Lecture: JQB24
Tutorial: DLR
|
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13
|
28 April 2016
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Religion and
Politics in Ghana
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Extent and
Influence of religion
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Lecture: JQB24
Tutorial: DLR
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Reading List
Crawford Young
(1976) The Politics Of Cultural Pluralism, Madison: University
of Wisconsin Press.
Naomi Chazan
(1982) “Ethnicity and Politics in Ghana”, Political Science Quarterly,Vol.
97, No. 3, Autumn, pp. 461-485.
A. K. D.
Frempong (2001) “Ghana’s 2000 Elections: The Ethnic Undercurrents”, in J. R. A.
Ayee, ed. Deepening Democracy in Ghana: Politics of the 2000
Elections”, Vol. 1, Accra: Freedom Publications, pp. 141- 159.
Frempong (2006)
“Ethnicity, Democracy and Ghana’s Election 2004” in K. Boafo-Arthur ed. Voting
for Democracy in Ghana: The 2004 Elections in Perspective,Thematic Studies,
Accra: Freedom Publications, pp. 157-186
J. R. A. Ayee
(nd) “Voting Patterns in the 2004 Elections”, Discussing Issues not
Sensations http://ghanaelectionwatch.com/blog/index.php?itemid=5
E. Gyimah-Boadi
(2003) “Ghana: The Political Economy of ‘Successful’ Ethno-regional Conflict
Management” in Bastain, Sunil and Robin Luckham , eds. Can Democracy be
Designed? The Politics of Institutional Choice in Conflict-torn
Societies, London/New York: Zed Books, pp.120-144.
H. Jockers, D.
Kohnert and P. Nugent (2009) “The Successful Ghana Election of 2008: A
Convenient Myth? Ethnicity in Ghana’s Elections Revisited”, Munich Personal
RePEc Archive MPRA) Paper No. 16167.
Bob
Kelly (2005) “The 2004 Elections in Northern Ghana”, Review of African
Political Economy, Vol. 32, No. 104/105, Jun-Sept, pp. 455-461.
John S. Pobee
(1991) Religion and Politics in Ghana, Accra: Asempa Publishers.
Jean Marie
Allman (1991) “Hewers of Wood, Carriers of Water: Islam, Class and Politics on
the Eve of Ghana’s Independence”, African Studies Review, Vol.
34, No.2, pp. 1-26.
K. Ansah-Koi
(1998) “Walking the Tightrope: Chiefs, Chieftaincy and the 1996 Elections in
Ghana”, in J. R. A. Ayee, ed. The 1996 General Elections and Democratic
Consolidation in Ghana, Accra: Gold-Type Ltd, pp. 139-155.
Kwame
Boafo-Arthur (2006) “Chieftaincy in Ghana: Challenges and Prospects in the 21
Century” in Irene K. Odotei and Albert K. Awedoba, eds. Chieftaincy in
Ghana: Culture, Governance and Development, Accra: Sub-Saharan
Publishers, pp. 145-168
Samuel K.
Gyapong (2006) “The Role of Chieftaincy in Ghana’s Democratic Experiment” in
Odotei and Awedoba, eds. Chieftaincy in Ghana, pp. 183-191
E. Debrah (2007)
“Fifty Years of Party Politics in Ghana: The Balance Sheet” in J. R. A. Ayee
(ed) Ghana at 50: Government, Politics and Development, Accra:
Friedrich Ebert Foundation, pp. 107-123.
A. K. D.
Frempong (2007) “Political Conflict and Elite Consensus in the Liberal State”,
in Kwame Boafo-Arthur, ed. Ghana: One Decade of the Liberal State, London/Dakar:
Zed/CODESRIA Books, pp.128-164.
Beatrix
Allah-Mensah (2005) Women in Politics and Public Life in Ghana, Accra:
Friedrich Elbert Foundation.
Beatrix
Allah-Mensah (2007) “Women in Politics in Ghana, 1993-2003” in Kwame
Boafo-Arthur, ed. Ghana: One Decade of the Liberal State, London/Dakar:
Zed/CODESRIA Books, pp.251-279
Mike Oquaye
(1996) “Youth, Politics and Society in Ghana” in F. K. Drah & Mike Oquaye,
eds. Civil Society in Ghana, Accra: FES, pp. 163-202.
Richard Asante
(2006) “The Youth and Politics in Ghana: Reflections on the 2004 General
Elections” in K. Boafo-Arthur ed. Voting for Democracy in Ghana: The
2004 Elections in Perspective, Thematic Studies, Accra: Freedom
Publications, pp. 211-236.
Ransford E. V.
Gyampo (2008) The Youth and Political Ideology in Ghanaian Politics,Inter-Faculty
Lecture delivered on 18 October 2007, University of Ghana, Legon.
Plagiarism
Policy
Be reminded of
UG Plagiarism Policy (Refer to UG Public Affairs Website)
Examination
Interim
Assessment: Take-Home Assignment to collected Mid-Semester (Week 7)
End of Semester
Examination: Two-&-Half-Hour Paper of two Sections. Section A: 50
short-answer questions (compulsory for 50marks) and Section B:
three-essay questions (answer any one for 20marks)
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