Analysis of Ghanaian‑Nigerian Diaspora Tensions
Analysis of Ghanaian‑Nigerian Diaspora Tensions A brief exchange in a public park can reveal far more than a momentary lapse in civility. When a small group of men trade “brotherly” jests that quickly harden into targeted insinuations about nationality, occupation and morality, the incident becomes a public performance of exclusion. The laughter of bystanders — many of whom do not share the speakers’ background — converts private insult into spectacle. What is often dismissed as banter in fact draws on deeper historical memories and contemporary pressures that shape relations between Ghanaian and Nigerian communities both in West Africa and across the diaspora. The roots of these tensions are neither new nor reducible to individual malice. In the late twentieth century, a series of migration crises and state policies produced mass movements of people across West African borders. Those episodes left durable narratives of displacement, blame and humiliation that have been transmitt...