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Pan-African Futurism

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Ghana has been a crucial site of encounters between the West and Africa and a historic center for twentieth-century Pan-African independence movements. Today, it has also emerged as an important no...
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  • 21 October 2025
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Ghana has been a crucial site of encounters between the West and Africa and a historic center for twentieth-century Pan-African independence movements. Today, it has also emerged as an important node of technology-driven development in the Global South. Ghana's activist software developers and digital diaspora are redefining the role of technology, not simply as a means for economic growth, but as a tool for greater African political autonomy. In this rich ethnography, Reginold A. Royston uses the term "Pan-African futurism" to describe the redemptive ethos among technologists working on development projects on the ground in Africa today. Royston charts the explosion of mobile Internet access on the African continent, growing interest in African tech entrepreneurship, and the flowering of digital transnational ties. Ghana's Pan-African futurists advocate entrepreneurship and civil society activism as a means of "hacking" the kinds of socioeconomic development that have long been advocated by NGOs. Using participant observation and interviews with tech developers on the ground and media producers in the diaspora, including in virtual spaces and with communities online, Royston provides a nuanced portrait of tech users focused on "social good" emanating from the Global South, expanding the discourse for contemporary Pan-African politics.
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Price: $29.95
Pages: 304
Publisher: University of California Press
Imprint: University of California Press
Publication Date: 21 October 2025
ISBN: 9780520423435
Format: eBook
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Contents
 
Acknowledgments
List of Abbreviations
 
Introduction: Disrupting the Network Society
1. Asymmetrical Networks: Understanding Ghanaian Cyberculture
2. Hacking Development: Ghana's Activist-Developers
3. Digital Diaspora
4. Afropolitan Mediascapes
5. Pan-Africanism or Africapitalism? The Paradox of Entrepreneurship as Liberation
Conclusion: The Aesthetics and Technopolitics of Pan-African Futurism
 
Notes
Bibliography
Index