Beyond poverty and criminalization: Splintering youth groups and ‘conflict of governmentalities’ in urban Ghana

Type Journal Article - Ghana Journal of Geography
Title Beyond poverty and criminalization: Splintering youth groups and ‘conflict of governmentalities’ in urban Ghana
Author(s)
Volume 8
Issue 1
Publication (Day/Month/Year) 2016
Page numbers 51-78
URL https://www.ajol.info/index.php/gjg/article/view/138518
Abstract
Youth violence is a universal phenomenon and can take many shapes and forms. In Ghana the
upsurge, scale and scope of such violence in major cities are becoming worrying, making it
imperative to examine the nexus between poverty, splintering youth groups, and crime.
Typically, youth criminal and antisocial behaviour raise questions as to whether city
authorities lack effective structures to cope with increasing urbanization or are being overly
accommodating to varying crime responses, some of which are above and beyond legal
policing measures. Using content analysis of media reports, archival records, scholarly
literature, 50 key informant interviews (KIIs), and 15 focus group discussions (FGDs), we
examine the multiple fields of youth ‘governmentalities’ and their preoccupation with security
issues—issues that are of great significance to formal state institutions. Borrowing from the
philosophy of methodological individualism embedded in rational choice theory, our study
reveals the emergence of a number of local youth groups whose activities, predicated mainly
on the quest for better livelihood, incorporate varied rationalities, techniques, and practices,
some of which are negatively impacting on the urban fabric. We contend that some of these
activities not only challenge the legitimacy of the state but also call into question the ability of
the official institutions responsible for maintaining law and order to guarantee protection and
secure justice for all.

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