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How Debt Became Care: Child Pawning and Its Transformations in Akuapem, the Gold Coast, 1874-1929
Accepted manuscript   Open access   Peer reviewed

How Debt Became Care: Child Pawning and Its Transformations in Akuapem, the Gold Coast, 1874-1929

Cati Coe
Africa, Vol.82(2), pp.287-311
2012
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.7282/T3BP04FK

Abstract

Pawning Debt Children Slavery Ghana Akwapim (Ghana)
Studies of slavery in Africa have noted the persistence of those relations in different forms, such as through pawning, allowing social changes in power, status, and wealth to be weathered more gradually. As pawning itself became less frequent, did other kinds of relationships take its place? Some scholars have argued that pawning was folded into marriage and fatherhood, others that there are continuities with fosterage and domestic servant arrangements today. This paper examines the question of pawning’s transformations in Akuapem, a region in southeastern Ghana involved in forms of commercial agriculture that were heavily dependent on slave labour and the capital raised by pawning. Ultimately, it argues that debt became key to fatherhood and fosterage relations between children and adults, changing from a short-term exchange to more lifelong reciprocal relations of care.
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http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/S000197201200006XView
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