INTRODUCTION
In the early 1960s Africa was rife with hopes. For the newly independent states, the collection, construction, and dissemination of statistics came to be seen as an important precondition of economic and social modernization. As the first colony in Sub-Saharan Africa to gain independence from British rule, in March 1957, Ghana incarnated the hopes of the continent. Between 1957 and 1966, when a military coup put an end to the rule of Kwame Nkrumah, the state embarked on a radical attempt to expand the provision of health and education, and guide the transformation of the country from a cocoa exporter to a planned and industrialized economy.Footnote 1 The 1960 Population Census of Ghana was expected to play an important role in making this possible.Footnote 2 Shortly before the enumeration began, Nkrumah declared on the radio:
My Government attaches the very greatest importance to the successful outcome of this operation, the first census since Ghana became independent.… The Government needs to know how many people there are in the country and the structure of the population in order to enable it to organize its development plans and services in accordance with the manpower resources of the country.Footnote 3
The census took place at an ambivalent juncture in Ghana's political history, when the Convention People's Party, which had led the country to independence, was experiencing the transition from “mass party” to authoritarian regime.Footnote 4 Although Ghana was formally declared a one-party state only in 1964 in the aftermath of a referendum that disbanded all political opposition, by the early 1960s the signs were growing of an authoritarian transformation.Footnote 5 This could be seen, for example, in the frequent application of the Preventive Detention Act, passed in 1958 and reinforced through successive amendments in 1962 and 1963, which allowed imprisonment of those suspected of anti-government activities for up to five years without charge or trial.Footnote 6 The press was placed under the direct control of government-appointed censors, while universities were being purged of “neocolonial” and “reactionary” elements.Footnote 7 Based on archival sources collected in Ghana and Britain, this article uses census propaganda as a case study to reexamine the relationship between the iconographies and the practices underpinning the construction of statistical knowledge and the process of imagining and building the postcolonial state.
As a landmark of state sovereignty, census-taking has been central in the reflections of historians and sociologists concerned with processes of state formation. Since the nineteenth century, census-taking has usually been located at the intersection of “the political project of developing the administrative infrastructure and authority of a modern state, the cultural project of constructing the communal bonds … of a modern nation, and the scientific project of producing useful knowledge about the population.”Footnote 8 Not only does the census occupy a central role in the making of Benedict Anderson's “imagined communities” but, most notably since Michel Foucault's influential analysis of “governmentality” and “biopolitics,” demographic statistics has emerged as a rich site for analyzing the connections between state knowledge, bureaucratic power, and population as an object of governance.Footnote 9 Census-taking also fits neatly into James Scott's account of how states, through the imposition of simplified conceptual grids, make societies “legible” and transform them into objects of policy intervention.Footnote 10 Building on these insights, historians, sociologists, and anthropologists have analyzed the political implications of census-taking in a variety of contexts, including Italy, Germany, Canada, United States, India, Brazil, and Israel.Footnote 11 Despite substantial differences, all of these studies share the insight that the census does not simply describe an already existing reality, but plays an active role in its construction and consolidation.
Although several studies of census-taking in Rwanda, Burundi, and especially Nigeria raise important questions regarding the legacies of colonialism and ethnic politics, census-taking has not figured prominently in analyses of state-building in postcolonial Africa.Footnote 12 This is unfortunate for reasons that are related to both the evolution of African states in the long-run and the specificities of postcolonial politics. With reference to the former, Jeffrey Herbst claimed that the most striking continuity in African state-building is that “almost all leaders have had to confront the problem of low population densities, which have made it expensive to control people as distance from the capital increases relative to areas with higher population densities.”Footnote 13 From this viewpoint, census-taking can be seen as a historically situated instrument that could quantify colonial and postcolonial rulers’ “wealth over people.”Footnote 14 It is significant that in his census speech Nkrumah declared, “We shall surprise the world in the number and quality of our people and in the wealth of human resources at our disposal for building the nation.”Footnote 15 This is consistent with Herbst's claim that, following independence, African politicians used nationalism as a tool to deal with the structural obstacles that had constrained state capacity in precolonial and colonial times.Footnote 16 With reference to the specificities of postcolonial politics, this article follows in the footsteps of Jean-François Bayart.Footnote 17 While his approach is firmly grounded in the longue durée, Bayart invited scholars to “de-exoticize” postcolonial African politics by critically engaging with the ways in which local actors absorbed, re-appropriated, and reinvented concepts, technologies of power, and modes of accumulation. Approached in this way, the importance of studying census propaganda lies in its capacity to illuminate the multiple connections between population counting and political imagination at a time characterized by a fervent hybridization of visions and practices that were brought together under the rubric of “development.”
The starting point of my analysis differs from that of most discussions of census and state-building in Africa. Rather than understanding the political repercussions of population counting in terms of ethnic categorization,Footnote 18 I am interested in conceptualizing the relationship between the census and the building of the nation-state as mediated by the creation of public trust.Footnote 19 Theodore Porter argued that the expansion of quantification as a social and political technology since the nineteenth century should be understood as a response to an increasing distrust toward non-standardized forms of expertise.Footnote 20 In the public sphere, numbers were thought of as “objective” because quantification appeared to be a “technology of distance,” capable of “escaping the bounds of place and culture.”Footnote 21 Trust plays an even more crucial role in the collection of the raw data on which official figures are based: as noted by Harro Maas and Mary Morgan, one of the main differences between the numbers used in the natural sciences and economic and social statistics is that the latter “are always the outcome of a politically loaded interaction” between a subject who is counting and a subject who is being counted.Footnote 22 While the recent historiography on statistics emphasizes the importance of taking into account resistance to counting in order to produce a more accurate view of human agency,Footnote 23 attempts made by states to gain respondents’ cooperation have, with a few exceptions, escaped systematic scrutiny.Footnote 24 My focus is precisely on those activities, institutions, and practices that, preceding the count, were aimed at gaining the trust of the people and explaining to them the importance of being counted. In Ghana, these attempts found expression in an extensive “Census Education and Enlightenment Campaign” conducted in schools and in the press. A focus on census education reveals the limits of understanding the link between statistics and state building as a story that is confined to the statistical office and other “centers of calculation.”Footnote 25 To grasp the connection between statistics and the iconography of postcolonial state-building we must go beyond the statistical machinery and treat census-taking as part of a wider range of political iconographies disseminated by other key institutions of nation-making such as schools and the press.
The political iconographies constructed by the Census Education and Enlightenment Campaign were heavily mediated by the ideas and practices associated with “development,” providing simultaneously an agenda for state-building and a shared language between international organizations and the first generation of African postcolonial policy-makers.Footnote 26 A focus on census education allows a partial reassessment of the place of statistics within what James Ferguson called “development discourse,” as well as a more refined understanding of the political implications of the reception of the “global” statistical standards disseminated by international organizations.Footnote 27 In his classic study of Lesotho, Ferguson argued that what characterizes “development discourse” is its capacity to produce political effects (typically the extension of bureaucratic power) by depoliticizing the process of development.Footnote 28 Within this framework, an important part of the “depoliticizing” nature of development follows from the embracement of a technocratic platform, which reimagines policies as being entirely based on the “objective” judgement of apolitical experts. The discourse disseminated by the “development apparatus” acts as an “anti-politics” machine through its capacity to mask the connection between “development” and concrete power relations and power structures. Although the construction of demographic statistics seems to fit comfortably in this model, I argue that the census education campaign prevented the count from being framed exclusively in the technocratic language of “development discourse.” Complementing Ferguson's characterization of development as an “anti-politics machine,” I show that the possibility of obtaining people's trust, without which an accurate census would have been impossible, was intimately linked with the “re-politicization” of the census in the form of a wide range of imaginative representations about the postcolonial state, Ghana's history, and its political leadership.
Yet, in order to understand the concrete ways in which these representations entered Ghana's political imagination, we need to go beyond the nation-state—however defined—as our field of investigation. In the postwar world, the rise of “global population” as a key object of development policy was intimately connected with new forms of knowledge and governance institutionalized by the United Nations, which emerged as a powerful center for the global dissemination of statistical standards.Footnote 29 While in 1950, when the United Nations inaugurated the first World Population Census Programme, the “population problem” was mostly seen as a Japanese, Indian, and Chinese affair,Footnote 30 by 1960 Africa had fully entered the global neo-Malthusian imagination.Footnote 31 Among the twenty-four African countries that held population censuses between 1955 and 1962,Footnote 32 Ghana was the first independent country in Africa, south of the Sahara, to undertake a census explicitly designed to be part of the 1960 World Census Programme.Footnote 33 Benjamin Gil, United Nations census expert and director of the social and demographic section of the Central Bureau of Statistics of Israel, travelled to Accra to turn the 1960 Population Census of Ghana into what he emphatically called the “first modern census of contemporary Africa.”Footnote 34 For the Statistical Office of the United Nations, the essential features of a “modern” census included government sponsorship, defined territory, universality, simultaneity, individual units of enumeration, compilation, and publication.Footnote 35 Furthermore, a “modern census” required the organization of a “census publicity campaign” that aimed to dissipate “any anxiety about regarding the purposes of the census,” explain “the reason for various questions on the questionnaire,” and provide “some guidance as to the manner in which these questions should be answered.”Footnote 36 The recommendation that census education “should therefore be considered an important phase of census work and should not be unduly restricted for reasons of economy if the best possible census results are desired” clearly shows the importance the United Nations attached to the creation of public trust as a precondition for obtaining accurate population figures.Footnote 37 Although in recent years much attention has been paid to the evolution of the United Nations,Footnote 38 the focus has been on the construction of development ideas and statistical templates in the organization's headquarters rather than the implications of their reception in the developing world. The present article argues that census publicity, which has been largely overlooked, constitutes a valuable entry point for observing how the norms and standards produced by the “development apparatus” acquire new meanings in the political life of the recipient nations.
Building Trust at the Grassroots: The School Education Campaign
The Gold Coast (as Ghana was called under colonial rule) held its first population count in 1891, shortly after the British occupied the country's southern coastal areas in 1874, establishing the Gold Coast Colony. Between 1891 and independence in 1957, census-taking became a standard feature of the colonial administration, taking place in 1901, 1911, 1921, 1931, and 1948. While the different geographical coverages of these counts closely mirrored the changing boundaries of British rule in the area,Footnote 39 all these censuses were characterized by low reliability and serious undercounting.Footnote 40 Faced with a lack of infrastructures, funding, and trained personnel, the colonial state typically possessed neither the commitment nor the capacity necessary to accurately count the people under its jurisdiction.Footnote 41 This was not only a Ghanaian story, nor was it limited to the early decades of colonial domination. Still in 1951, the delegates of the Conference of Statisticians of Countries South of the Sahara agreed that a harsh climate, the necessity to cover vast areas with few roads, and the high mobility and widespread illiteracy of African populations all severely impeded gathering reliable population returns.Footnote 42
Another obstacle mentioned was that Africans were suspicious of census-taking.Footnote 43 Indeed, historically, Ghana's population figures have been consistently shaped by people's distrust of the state. Occasionally, people's unwillingness to cooperate was attributed to “ignorance, fear, and stupidity,”Footnote 44 but well into the 1950s it was explained as being due to “African cultural taboos” and fear of taxation.Footnote 45 Beliefs that disclosing the number of one's children would bring bad luck might explain some of the under-enumeration in colonial counts.Footnote 46 Fear of taxation was also firmly grounded in Ghana's history. Taxation was used to estimate the number of people living in a given area before the formal establishment of the Gold Coast colony, and can be traced back to the passing of the 1852 Poll Tax Ordinance.Footnote 47 In 1884, after the original ordinance had been repealed, the yearly Blue Book still claimed that “no means exist whereby a census could be taken of the Gold Coast settlements, the natives of which are suspicious of their numbers being counted, having, perhaps a lively recollection of the old days when the poll tax was in force.”Footnote 48
Since the first census in 1891, people's distrust elicited different forms of resistance. One was plain hostility: for example, the 1948 census reported that in the southern part of the country a “source of error arose from the deliberate opposition and refusal to allow a count by a group of villages.”Footnote 49 In other instances people fled the census takers. The District Commissioner of the Eastern Province during the 1911 census reported, “The Enumerators experienced considerable trouble, that there was a universal fear of a hut tax, and that in some cases on the approach of the Enumerator villages were deserted.”Footnote 50 In 1921, “some of the Chiefs and the people thought the Census a preliminary to the imposition of the Poll Tax,” while “some fishermen at Chama” took to the sea to avoid being counted.Footnote 51 Although in 1921 the overall attitude of the people toward the census seemed more favorable than in 1911, the report admitted that “even so, the conditions existing in the Gold Coast to-day absolutely prohibit the collection of accurate and entirely reliable statistics of population.”Footnote 52
Finally, the counted subjects could choose to provide inaccurate information. In most cases this resulted in under-enumeration: as already noted in the 1891 census “the Returns supplied by the Native Chiefs are all more or less influenced by [the] … dread of taxation.”Footnote 53 The provision of false information was obviously difficult to detect, but when it was discovered it could occasionally result in comical situations, like that described by a provincial commissioner in 1910:
On one chief I found it was absolutely necessary to inflict a fine, for whilst he was assuring me that he was poor and had no Cattle his veracity was fated to suffer a rude and unexpected shock, for a thunder storm which had been threatening suddenly developed, and his cattle which he had hidden in the bush on our approach, became terrified at the voilence [sic] of the storm, suddenly stampeded from their place of concealment and rushing into the town, in no unmistakable manner demonstrated their presence before my eyes and their perfidious owner.Footnote 54
Although it was expected that political independence would make citizens less distrustful of the government's purposes for counting them, in the eyes of the Central Census Committee “a passive attitude to the event, due to lack of understanding, could be equally detrimental.”Footnote 55 The extent to which these fears were justified was confirmed by a pilot survey conducted between 25 May and 6 June 1959 in a small selection of localities. Despite the fact that the test was preceded by a series of broadcasts on Radio Ghana, and though several enumerators had established contact with local chiefs to inform the populace of the initiative, the test revealed that of the cases in which interviewers faced “obstacles in enumeration” 10 percent were due to respondents’ reluctance to exchange information and 8.9 percent to a lack of census publicity.Footnote 56
The Central Census Committee's systematic attempts to gain people's trust set the 1960 census radically apart from its colonial predecessors. The importance Gil attached to obtaining the cooperation of the public at large—something he said was not yet receiving enough attention in African censusesFootnote 57—had far-reaching implications for the choice and training of enumerators, the activities taking place in the field, and the new institutional infrastructure charged with educating the public. The Census Education and Enlightenment Campaign brought together statistical experts, administrative bodies, and government departments that dealt with information and mass education.Footnote 58 By December 1959, the campaign's activities included the printing of eight thousand posters translated into the main vernacular languages, the publication of a few thousand copies of a booklet titled Knowing Ourselves, regular broadcasts on Radio Ghana, publicizing in newspapers, and the production of a ten minute movie.Footnote 59 The movie, significantly titled Answer for Tomorrow, was screened in urban cinemas and projected in rural areas with the vehicles of the Social Welfare Department. It showed “a mother feeding five hungry children,” “children having to walk several miles to school every day,” “a family in search of accommodation,” and overcrowded medical facilities, thereby pointing at pressing social problems—regarding nutrition, health, education, and housing—that the census could help to solve.Footnote 60
According to Gil, only simultaneous actions on all of these fronts would achieve the campaign's main goals, which included, but were not limited to, “Issue of information for the literate public,” “Creation of enthusiasm among the thousands of potential enumerators,” and “Stimulation of devotion on the part of the Census staff.”Footnote 61 The 1960 census employed some seven thousand enumerators and was undoubtedly the largest and most labor-intensive statistical inquiry ever conducted in Ghana to that point. Ensuring not only the competence but also the enthusiasm and commitment of the census staff became crucial. Census officers had to be persuaded that they were taking part in a great national enterprise. “By your selection for appointment,” the Minister for Economic Affairs told the first cohort of regional census assistants and census district officers, “you are therefore entitled to consider yourself fortunate and to be justly proud of the National privilege conferred upon you.”Footnote 62
The connection between schools and census-taking did not begin in 1959: school teachers and school masters had already been widely employed as enumerators in the colonial censuses of 1921, 1931, and 1948.Footnote 63 Their suitability to act as enumerators had been justified on the ground that they were unequivocally literate and employed in the public sector.Footnote 64 It was also argued that they more likely to be perceived as detached from tax collection, which as we have seen was a recurrent source of misunderstanding facing colonial census-takers. In colonial counts, the process of acquiring the trust of the counted subjects strictly followed a vertical, top-down approach: the administration tried to persuade the chiefs that the census was necessary and detached from taxation, and the chiefs in turn tried to convince the population to cooperate.
These practices continued in the 1960 census, with Gil travelling to different parts of the country to address the chiefsFootnote 65 and reinforcing the message that the “school teacher is the person who will be favourably accepted by the population as he brings the benefit of education to the children” and “will not be associated with tax paying or any other administrative operations.”Footnote 66 Gil also noted that the teachers were best qualified not only to estimate the age of the children when this was unknown, but also, through that, to infer the age of their parents.Footnote 67 However, the radical novelty of Gil's approach was the idea that school teachers were ideally located to teach the pupils themselves the usefulness of the census.Footnote 68 His notion that “the children will act as the best communication media; through the children we want the Census idea to reach the parents and enlighten them”Footnote 69 represented an important change in approach.
In order to transform the children into agents of “modernization from below,” the Ministry of Education prepared a series of special lectures that the teachers studied and then delivered in the classrooms of the schools targeted for the initiative. Unfortunately, out of the twelve lessons planned, to the best of my knowledge only the texts of the first three have survived in the archives, while the fourth is reprinted in the census’ General Report.Footnote 70 Luckily, from these lecture notes it is still possible to glimpse the representations of the state the campaign articulated and to get a sense of the discursive strategies it employed to mobilize Ghanaian youths to make the public “census minded.”Footnote 71
But how did the campaign go about explaining the census to the children and convincing them of its importance? A recurring strategy was to compare census-taking to tasks faced by pupils and teachers in their daily lives. For example, in the first lesson enumerating people was compared to compiling class registers.Footnote 72 More importantly, the census education campaign was designed to represent the state as a benevolent, inclusive, and knowledgeable entity:
You will be interested to know that with respect to teachers the Ministry of Education knows the number—here are the figures.… Is this not interesting? How many children are in approved primary and middle school? Again the Ministry knows the figure to a child….
This year there are 465,290 children in approved primary schools and 139,984 in approved middle schools—making a total of 605,274 children. The boy or girl sitting in the corner of the classroom and the child in the 2nd column, 4th row in the class are included in the total. I think each school child should be proud to know that the Ministry of Education regards or sees him or her as an individual.Footnote 73
The second lesson, titled “Census as a Form of Measurement,” claimed that the government, despite its extensive knowledge, had “no money but that which belongs to the people,” and thus was burdened with the moral responsibility of spending it in the wisest possible way to everyone's benefit.Footnote 74 This passage tackled the fears that census-taking would result in increased taxation: far from being aimed at acquiring additional resources, the census was simply a necessary tool to allow the government to spend people's money (presumably already collected) in the best possible way. Furthermore, the second lesson put across the message, again illustrated with a variety of everyday examples, that “the idea of measurement, whether applied to space, time, weight, distance, or area is indispensable if men have to live wisely, and that measurement is in fact photographed on every aspect of civilized life.”Footnote 75 This message echoed the iconography of mathematics textbooks produced in the last years of colonial rule. Like the census campaign, the 1954 middle school textbook A West African Mathematics presented measurement and quantification as preconditions for economic and social advancement: “Mathematics help us to work out how to make the things we need in modern life. Without Mathematics, there would be no shops, no motor cars, no railways, no bulldozers to clear the forests, no electric light, and we should probably have to live forever in caves or very simple huts.”Footnote 76 The education campaign differed from the textbook by placing the state at the center of its narrative of measurement and progress.
The third lesson, “Everyone Shall Count as One Person, Not More Not Less’” built on the arithmetic problem. The Ministry of Education stated that if the single task of counting each individual (compared to the different steps of the problem) was flawed because of lack of cooperation with the enumerators, the final result would be wrong: “If you will say ‘I do not matter’ and that fellow ‘he does not matter’ the correct population of Ghana will not be known.”Footnote 77 Besides reiterating the image of the state as an inclusive and benevolent agent capable of complicated acts of calculation, the lecture introduced the key theme of the interdependence between individual conduct and the overall result of the census.Footnote 78 By reflecting on the “individual” as both a unit of enumeration and as an agent of political transformation we can fully understand the reception of the United Nations template and its unintended consequences. Indeed, in the rhetoric institutionalized by the United Nations, population censuses embodied a democratic (and egalitarian) attitude; it stressed that the “importance of the population count is that each person represents an individual ‘vote,’” regardless of gender, income, location, or social status.Footnote 79 This stance was reflected in the United Nations’ emphasis on the crucial importance of adopting a single template for the whole population, and of choosing the individual as the unit of recording and enumeration.Footnote 80 The incorporation of these features represented a significant departure from previous statistical methods applied in Ghana,Footnote 81 and they became markers of the 1960 census’ “modernity.” The combination of individual enumeration on a separate line, and the choice of a single form for the entire population, not only extended the scope for statistical analysis,Footnote 82 but also evoked the possibility of building a postcolonial nation-state made up of equal citizens.Footnote 83 Following this logic, in the United Nations’ rhetoric, census publicity could be seen as promoting the importance of being counted as individuals who were effective political participants.
These lessons were delivered via a broad range of activities targeting local communities, with children marching with placards to raise awareness of the census (figure 1). Field assistant education officers were sent on ten-day visits to villages to establish contacts with the chiefs and distribute the campaign material to the teachers, while head teachers were asked to maintain a separate exercise book titled “The 1960 Census” in which they noted all work done as part of the education campaign.Footnote 84
The census education campaign sat at the intersection of colonial strategies and new forms of state intervention. The widespread use of radio, cinema, and newspapers in mass education campaigns had already emerged in the 1940s and found expression in fields like extramural education, agriculture, and health.Footnote 85 In the early 1950s the Convention People's Party had become aware of mass education's importance for mobilizing local communities and promoting civic virtues.Footnote 86 But in the aftermath of independence the mobilization of the youth took on a new urgency; it became a pillar of postcolonial state-building and a crucial element in the socialist transformation envisaged by Nkrumah.Footnote 87 The latter aspect reveals the fluidity of the political visions for which children were mobilized. The centrality of school pupils as agents of “modernization from below” in the 1959–60 census campaign shared similarities with the Young Pioneers movement established in 1960, though there were many crucial differences. The Pioneers drew inspiration from their Soviet counterpart, and in the Ghanaian imagination they evoked dark tales of brainwashing and coercion. People saw them as spies who reported to the local authorities expressions of dissent against the regime, even those uttered by their parents.Footnote 88 Furthermore, the content and language of the census campaign's educational materials was quite unlike the “Nkrumaist gospel” imposed on the Pioneers, which emphasized new forms of revolutionary citizenship, and loyalty to the Convention People's Party and to Nkrumah as the nation's messiah.Footnote 89 Despite these differences, when we look at the campaign and the movement in the same historical frame, they appear as complementary elements of an emerging order in which children were employed to project, mediate, and disseminate new, official representations of the postcolonial state at grassroots levels. It would be overreaching to suggest that the census campaign directly shaped the evolution of the Young Pioneers, but it is ironic that some of the same children who were inviting their parents and their local communities to trust the state and become known to the government through the choice of being counted would become a central trope in the political culture of silence, fear, and suspicion that characterized Ghana's authoritarian evolution.Footnote 90
The Census and the State in the Press
Far from being limited to schools, discussions and events to make the public “census-minded” were set up by actors as different as members of the ruling party, leaders of the women and farmers’ associations, and religious organizations.Footnote 91 As part of the education campaign, the census also received widespread coverage in the press. Between October 1959 and March 1960 more than four hundreds articles, cartoons, and slogans reminded people of census night, invited them to trust the enumerators, and documented the progress of propaganda activities in different parts of the country.Footnote 92 The census’ General Report maintained that the press’ most important contribution was to keep the inquiry “out of controversial matters” and present it “as a national and non-partisan operation.”Footnote 93 However, the count took place when Ghana was about to embark on the plebiscite that would result in the adoption of a Republican Constitution. The Republican Constitution vested much greater executive power in Nkrumah's hands, allowing him to rule by decree and bypass the Parliament.Footnote 94 The census report argued that by postponing the plebiscite the government showed awareness that a simultaneous occurrence of the two events would have undermined the image of the census as a non-political and non-partisan operation.Footnote 95 Yet, in the daily papers we find evidence of the many ways in which the census was re-politicized in connection with the upcoming presidential election. Furthermore, given the extreme importance Nkrumah's government attached to the media as a tool of political education, and the increasingly repressive climate in which newspapers operated, textual and visual representations in the press inscribed population counting into broader narratives about the postcolonial state.Footnote 96
The Ashanti Pioneer explicitly sided in the presidential election with Nkrumah's opponent J. B. Danquah (who would eventually become the most famous victim of the Preventive Detention Act, dying in prison in 1965), and invited its readers to vote against the constitutional changes proposed by the government. References to the census were scant, and usually limited to small reminders of the census date, while much attention was devoted to raising awareness of the excessive concentration of power in Nkrumah's hands that would result from the approval of the Republican Constitution.Footnote 97 The dissident voice of the Ashanti Pioneer would be silenced in February 1961 when the newspaper was placed under a government appointed censor.Footnote 98 In contrast, the Ghana Times and the Daily Graphic, aligned with the ruling party, provided frequent updates about the progress of census activities.Footnote 99 However, it was the Accra-based Evening News that hosted the most powerful and imaginative narratives about the count. This is not surprising given that the paper was established by Nkrumah himself in 1948, and was later described by him as “the vanguard of the movement and its chief propagandist, agitator, mobilizer and political educationalist.”Footnote 100 An interesting example of this process of reinvention comes from an article published on 19 March 1960 by Ghanaian Mabel Dove, a leading female commentator on socio-political affairs:Footnote 101
The eve of Ghana's Freedom, that was a memorable night, a never-to-be forgotten night when the Leader Kwame Nkrumah recalled the agony of the struggle and tears ran down his checks [sic] … the tears for past suffering and the tears of joy for freedom, that was 5th March 1957 when the church bells tolled and the great crowd in their thousands shouted Freedom Freedom!… March 6 has now gone down in history as the greatest day when Kwame Nkrumah made history … and again in March, Sunday the 20th of March, bonfires will light up towns, villages and hamlets and the flames will shed a radiance all over the country whilst men, women and children rejoice and dance to the strains of the drums….
Remember the SECOND GREAT NIGHT OF GHANA AFTER INDEPENDENCE, CENSUS NIGHT—A NIGHT TO REMEMBER.Footnote 102
Building on the coincidence that both the country's independence and census night occurred in March, the article did not simply treat census-taking as one of the landmarks of postcolonial political sovereignty but, by turning census night into “the second great night of Ghana,” it inscribed population counting in a national epic of political struggle and self-determination. The incorporation of the census into a national tale of sacrifice can also be observed in a picture depicting a vast cheering crowd above the inscription “We'll Live and Die for Ghana / We're Ready for the Census.”Footnote 103
The pages of the Evening News also open a window into a feature that increasingly characterized Ghana's political life in the 1960s: the cult of Kwame Nkrumah. The employment of religious references had characterized Nkrumah's political persona since his rise to prominence in the years of decolonization,Footnote 104 but in the early 1960s this “political theology” became a pervasive feature of public discourse. The struggle for the construction of “Nkrumaism” as the new official ideology that could guide Ghana's socialist transformation was based on the combination of elements of nationalism and Pan-Africanism with echoes of Marxism-Leninism, often read through a religious and occasionally mystical iconography. This was particularly evident in the press, where Nkrumah was often referred to as the Osagyefo, literally “the redeemer,” or “The Good Shepherd,” or “Africa's Man of Destiny.”Footnote 105 Public meetings sometimes “began with such songs as If you follow him [Nkrumah], he will make you fishers of men,” with an obvious reference to the Gospel.Footnote 106
In the Evening News, the census and the presidential election were explicitly connected, and both were instrumental in presenting Nkrumah as the savior of the nation:
As eloquently shown by Achille Mbembe with reference to Cameroon, newspaper cartoons can be useful tools to reconstruct the political culture of the “postcolony.”Footnote 108 Indeed, a cartoon published in the Evening News on the 18 March 1960 reinforces the depiction of Nkrumah as the savior of the nation, and the census as the tool through which he could plan a better future for present and future generations, while simultaneously suggesting additional meanings (see figure 2).Footnote 109
In an effort to avoid misunderstandings, the census schedules omitted questions about citizenship; these were replaced by questions about country of origin. Possibly unintentionally, the cartoon seems to represent “true” citizenship as following from the expression of loyalty to the government through the choice of being counted, rather than in connection with legal status. The choice to be counted is productive of new political identities: it makes people “true and free citizens of Ghana,” and acts as a device of transfiguration, closing the gap between the people and the Leader. Indeed both the facial features and the cry of the child on the left leave no doubt that the joyful man at the center of the composition is Nkrumah himself. This illustration removes the census from the realm of the state as rational and bureaucratic agent and uses it to articulate the narrative of its mystical personification in the father of the nation. Carrying the Christian analogy to its extreme implications, the fish on the left hyperbolically suggests the participation of the natural world (presumably made possible by Nkrumah's Christic attributes) to the project of national construction reified in the census. Similarly, the man weeping for having chosen not to be counted, leading to his exclusion from the nation-state, evokes the suffering of those in hell who are excluded from the light of God. But, unlike hell, the postcolonial state offered an opportunity of redemption with the next census.
With the count finally approaching, the Evening News reported that the people of Ghana were caught up in what was emphatically called “census fever.”Footnote 110 At 6.10 p.m., Nkrumah gave a radio broadcast reminding the people that the “most important element … is your co-operation,” without which “the best plans and organization, and the efficiency of the field staff will not achieve the results we want.”Footnote 111 Across the whole country census night was celebrated with “traditional” drumming, dancing, candle processions, football matches, bonfires, tolling of church bells, mass religious services, and beating of drums. The 20th March celebrations served both symbolic and practical purposes. Since the 1960 count was a de facto census—counting the people actually present in the country during the enumeration rather than the usual residents (a de jure census)—the festivities could “impress on the whole population this specific date which was used as a reference date for several census items” and, by enumerating each individual “only at the place of stay of Census night” reduce the potential for ambiguous answers, confusion, and double counting.Footnote 112 On the other hand, by inscribing the census into the nation's memory and subjugating the national population “to a social time fixed by the government,”Footnote 113 the festivities articulated the vision of an “imagined community” in which spatial differences lost meaning, and in which the notion of the census as a secular, rationalistic, and technocratic exercise was complemented with narratives of “traditional” culture (see figure 3).
THE CENSUS RESULTS
After the bonfires were extinguished, the drum beating stopped, and the dancing ceased, the enumeration began at 6 a.m. on 21 March.Footnote 114 In vestiges of the colonial order and in new architectural sites celebrating the power of Nkrumah's regime, in urban shanty towns and coastal villages, in the northern savannah and in the forest belt, questions were asked and questionnaires were filled. The census forms were then gathered and processed in the headquarters of the statistical office in Accra with newly purchased IBM electronic punch-card machines.Footnote 115 The provisional results of the count were released in May 1960: the total population of Ghana amounted to 6,690,730.Footnote 116 The final population figure, published the following December, was even higher, amounting to 6,726,815.Footnote 117 This largely exceeded the United Nations 1958 projections (based on 1948 figures) that had estimated the population in 1960 would be 4,980 million, and reach 6,100 million only in 1975.Footnote 118 The difference between the total population recorded in 1960 and 1948 figures was around 2,600,000 people. Since this implied an implausible population growth of more than 60 percent in just twelve years, it seemed evident that under-enumeration in the last colonial count was larger than previously thought. Of course, it was also possible that some of this discrepancy was due to over-enumeration in the 1960 count, as voiced by “certain foreign circles” in the immediate aftermath of the figures’ publication.Footnote 119 But these fears were largely dispelled by the post-enumeration survey.Footnote 120 In any case, such a high population figure qualified the pro-natalist orientation that characterized the early years of Nkrumah's rule.Footnote 121 In 1964, the Seven-Year Plan for National Reconstruction and Development, an ambitious blueprint that should have directed the transformation of Ghana into an industrialized socialist economy, claimed that a “growing population presents an opportunity as much as a problem.”Footnote 122
Outside Ghana, the census was greeted as an example of good statistical practice from which other African countries could learn. The heads of other African statistical offices were invited on a study tour to observe the implementation of the post-enumeration survey.Footnote 123 In 1961 the Ghanaian government, in cooperation with the United Nations Economic Commission for Africa, set up and hosted a West African Training Centre in Population Census Techniques.Footnote 124 Although in some respects some of the data produced by the census compared unfavorably with that produced by other African countries, the 1960 count stood as a landmark.Footnote 125 Still in 2005, the Ghana Statistical Service regarded the 1960 census as an example of “improvements in data collection methods, objectives, scope and production of adequate and reliable demographic information.”Footnote 126 However, as rightly noted by Martha Lampland in her study of the falsification of statistics in communist Hungary, a focus on the veracity of numbers “obscures crucial social processes at the heart of modernizing practices.”Footnote 127 How did census propaganda shape the broader modernizing projects of trust building and state formation?
CONCLUSIONS
The education campaign did not lead to a complete disappearance of hostile reactions to census-taking. Sporadic manifestations occurred, for example, in enumeration areas “claimed by one or more chiefs to be under their jurisdiction,” or typically involved either ethnic groups or foreigners with a history of difficult relationships with the Ghanaian government.Footnote 128 While these occurrences might lead us to qualify the success of the census education campaign, we should note that all the localities that refused to be counted in the 1948 census were finally enumerated in 1960, while the census report proudly noted “the unprecedented public co-operation obtained for the national enumeration.”Footnote 129 Even considering that it remains extremely difficult to disentangle the specific effects of census propaganda from other elements that shaped the perceptions of the respondents—such as the hopes (and fears) associated with the first postcolonial government, or the legislative sanctions prescribed against those who refused to cooperateFootnote 130—the trajectory of census education in early independent Ghana helps refine our understanding of the “politics” of statistics.
Admittedly, there is nothing new in saying that statistics is “political.” The point, though, is to understand how it is that ideas and practices underpinning the construction of statistical knowledge enter the political realm. The tale of the Census Education and Enlightenment campaign offers three main insights, related to the sites and the ways in which statistics inspire and inform processes of political imagination and transformation, to the concrete strategies employed by the postcolonial African state, and to the political embodiment of “development discourse.” With reference to the first aspect, this study suggests that, far from being confined to statistical offices and the bureaucratic “center,” the link between the construction of statistical knowledge and the process of imagining a nation-state can be mediated by other crucial sites of nation-making, like schools and the press.Footnote 131 A focus on these sites implies a partial “shift” in the (physical and metaphorical) place of statistics in the process of state-building, zooming into the field, where the actual enumeration takes place and people's perceptions of the state directly affect the accuracy of the numbers produced. Seen through the lens of trust, the contribution of statistics to state-building stops being exclusively framed in terms of identification, classification, and quantification and becomes part of a wider set of cultural representations and political practices.
From the point of view of the literature on African state formation, this means that in order for the census to act as a political technology capable of accurately quantifying the state's potential wealth in people (in the form of accurate numbers) and actualizing it (in the form of political support), the education campaign had to inscribe the count within the narrative of a new social contract. This narrative revolved around exchanging people's cooperation with the promise of material progress, thus removing the census from the semantic spheres of taxation and surveillance that had hindered the colonial regime's capacity to provide an accurate population count. In light of the uneven political and institutional topography that typically characterizes African states,Footnote 132 the census education campaign should be read as part of a larger struggle to link the construction of statistical knowledge with the expansion and consolidation of the state's presence over its territory.Footnote 133
By looking at the content of the representations emerging from the education campaign, we observed that in the few intense months preceding the enumeration the census stopped being exclusively framed in the technical or bureaucratic language stressed by Ferguson.Footnote 134 Within that frame, the census would have been reduced to either a technocratic exercise of measurement necessary for national planning, or as an input in the United Nations’ attempt to take a snapshot of the global population. Instead, the census entered the literary imagination, informing visions of a utopian future where poverty and illiteracy would be eradicated, as in the anonymous poem quoted at the beginning of this article.Footnote 135 Census night was simultaneously inscribed into the country's memory as part of the epic of the country's victory against colonialism (“the second great night of Ghana after independence”), as the dawn of a bright postcolonial future, and as an occasion to invoke, through “traditional” dancing and drumming, the spirits of an “authentic” precolonial past.Footnote 136 The creation of the numbers and figures on which the articulation of “development” as object of expert knowledge depended was the product of visual and narrative representations that could “re-politicize” the census by placing it at the center of broader discourses about the state. In contrast with Ferguson, then, we observe that the creation of statistics, which contribute to the “depoliticizing” capacity of “development discourse,” can also depend on the articulation of narratives that perform the opposite operation.
This also raises questions about the ways in which the prescriptions of the “development apparatus” acquire new political meanings and connotations in the receiving contexts. The census campaign points at two very different channels. The school campaign captures the contested nature of the mobilization of children in Nkrumah's Ghana, which found justification in both the discourse built by the United Nations and in the authoritarian socialism that inspired the creation of the Young Pioneers. In the press, the census was presented as a tool of salvation and part of the syncretism characterizing the “applied religion” of Nkrumaism.Footnote 137 From this perspective, the census became simply a temporary embellishment for the political theology built around Nkrumah. As a result of these two processes, the democratic message with which the United Nations infused the task of census-taking became incarnated in a much more ambivalent political world. The task of acquiring people's trust created the interstitial space between a view of the state as a benevolent entity depending on individual participation, a technocratic agent capable of complex operations of quantification, and a messianic personification in the dictator.
In conclusion, census education can represent a useful departure point from which to interrogate the complex ties linking trust, quantification, propaganda, and political imagination. Between the 1950s and 1960s, several countries in Asia, Africa, and Latin America designed population censuses explicitly in line with the United Nations standards and recommendations.Footnote 138 With education campaigns becoming a potential juncture of the interface between state-building and transnational technocracy, there is certainly much scope for census propaganda to enrich our understanding of the place occupied by statistics in political imagination. Through further case studies and comparative analysis, a focus on census education can inform a political and cultural history of statistics that is more intimately connected with the tensions, visions, and dreams that are hidden beneath official numbers.