
New Books in History Alice Wiemers, "Village Work: Development and Rural Statecraft in Twentieth-Century Ghana" (Ohio UP, 2021)
Feb 28, 2026
Alice Wiemers, associate professor of history at Davidson College and author of Village Work, explores rural development and statecraft in northern Ghana. She focuses on everyday labor, village infrastructures, and how chiefs and family networks shaped projects. The conversation highlights the local making of development, the remaking of forced labor into self-help, and the persistence of peripheral statecraft.
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The Village As Both Particular Place And Generic Policy Unit
- Focusing on one village exposes the tension between particular local dynamics and the developer's interchangeable "village" model.
- Wiemers uses Pasenpe's particularity to show how policy-makers treated villages as generic project units, producing mismatches and local strategies.
Colonial Lists Made Villages A Cheap Administrative Technology
- The colonial state used simple lists of villages as a cheap spatial technology to order jurisdiction and requisition labor.
- Though ideological views of villages evolved (1930s onward), the administrative habit of treating villages as interchangeable persisted into later policy.
How Progressive Chiefs Harnessed Development Projects
- "Progressive chiefs" converted chieftaincy into a development script to attract projects and state attention.
- Wiemers profiles Sandamnab Azantalo and Wulunab Assebiam (Pasenpe's chief) to show chiefs' varied strategies linking chiefs to infrastructure.

