New paper: Race, Time, and Architecture: Dilemmas of Africanization in Ghana, 1951-1966

Journal of the Society of Architectural Historians 83:2 (2024), 191-208.
“Changing the Face of Ghana,” advertisement of the Ghana National Construction Company (G.N.C.C. / Newsletter: A Quarterly Magazine, Nov. 1961).

Download

Go to JSAH

This article discusses the Africanization of architectural labor in Ghana during the late colonial and early postindependence periods (1951–66). It focuses on the state-supported emergence, advancement, and emancipation of Indigenous architects and institutions in the context of decolonization and the Cold War. Using archival materials held in Accra, Kumasi, and London, the article shows how professionals and administrators negotiated between their double obligations: to fast-track governmental development plans and to Africanize the Public Works Department and its successors. These decision makers addressed temporal dilemmas concerning recruitment, standards, allocation, and racialization of architectural labor. In so doing, they redefined both colonial-era racial categories and racialized Cold War imaginaries of who counted as an African and who counted as an Other. This study advances the architectural history of postcolonial Ghana and broadens the debate about racialization of architecture beyond North America and Western Europe.