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Lauren M. MacLean, "Negotiating Power and Inequality in Ghana: Electricity and Citizenship as Reciprocity (Indiana UP, 2026)

Mar 15, 2026
Lauren M. MacLean, political scientist and Northeastern University chair who studies electricity access in Africa. She explores Ghana’s chronic power shortages, how drought and hydropower failures fuel unequal outage experiences, and why those most harmed often do not demand accountability. The conversation highlights spatial inequality, everyday coping strategies, and cultural responses like art and music.
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INSIGHT

Electricity Framed As A Citizen Right

  • Ghana's national pride in large hydro dams created expectations that electricity is a citizen right rather than just an economic input.
  • Nkrumah built Akosombo as both infrastructure and nation-building symbol, so citizens talk about the grid as the national grid.
INSIGHT

Why Dumsor Was Devastating Not Just Inconvenient

  • Dumsor denotes long, frequent, and unpredictable load-shedding that caused economic and social trauma.
  • Outages lasted 12–24+ hours, ruined refrigerated food, forced daily market trips, and generated post-traumatic routines like maximising tasks while power was on.
INSIGHT

Climate Shortfalls Collided With Rising Demand

  • Climate-driven droughts reduced hydro generation just as demand surged from economic growth and rising appliance ownership.
  • Reservoir levels at Akosombo visibly fell; less water meant fewer turbine hours while demographics and device use pushed demand up.
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