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Claire Nicolas, "Une si longue course: Sport, genre, et citoyenneté au Ghana et en Côte d’Ivoire (années 1900-1970)" (Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 2024)

Feb 11, 2026
Claire Nicolas, a researcher at Basel University and Ambizione grant holder, discusses her comparative study of sport, gender, and citizenship in Ghana and Côte d’Ivoire (1900–1970). She traces colonial and postcolonial physical culture, youth agency in schools and scouting, contrasts British and French sports governance, and explores how states and communities reshaped sporting life.
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ANECDOTE

Ampe: Women's Competitive Game

  • Nicolas highlights ampe as a historically significant women's game later confined to children’s play.
  • Archival accounts show adult women once contested ampe as organized competitions.
INSIGHT

Scouting's Colonial Arrival And Role

  • Scouting arrived early in Ghana via returning West African migrants and Baden-Powell's model.
  • Scouting functioned as voluntary training tied to schooling and offered belonging and practical skills.
INSIGHT

Scouting's Political Complexity

  • Scouting was more overtly political than sports; branches sometimes aligned with colonial authorities to avoid nationalist unrest.
  • Scouting's political leanings varied by territory and could be conservative.
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