Imperial policing and the antinomies of power in early colonial Ghana
Abstract
In the nineteenth century, constabulary officers in the British Gold Coast were emancipated
slaves purchased for conscription. From 1870 to 1900, British officials bought enslaved
men of “Hausa” origin, hailing from the Northern territories and the Niger hinterland.
In Britain’s eyes, Hausas constituted a venerable “martial race,” ideal for policing.
But to local communities, they were an ethnic group known for their enslaved past.
This essay reassesses dynamics of policing and imprisonment in the colony through
the histories of slavery and abolition. It argues that one result of Britain’s recruitment
practices was that police wanted to escape the colonial state as much as the convicts
under their care. The colonial prison was riven by a phenomenon of mutual escape.
These conditions formed the antinomies of power in early colonial Ghana.
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Sarah Balakrishnan
Assistant Professor of History
Sarah Balakrishnan is a tenure-track Assistant Professor of History, specializing
in sub-Saharan Africa, colonialism, and the Atlantic slave trade. She received her
PhD in History from Harvard University in 2020. Prior to joining the History Department
at Duke, she was a Carter G. Woodson Fellow at the University of Virginia and a Presidential
Postdoctoral Fellow in the History Department at the University of Minnesota Twin
Cities. Balakrishnan is a historian of imperialism and

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