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Opoku Agyeman : ウィキペディア英語版 | Opoku Agyeman Opoku Agyeman was born in Kumasi, Ghana, on August 4, 1942 and concluded high school education in 1963 at Achimota School where he edited the school newspaper and obtained an Advanced Level Certificate. He attended the University of Ghana from 1963 to 1966, editing the Legon Hall weekly, The Voice, and earning a Bachelor of Arts Honors degree in Political Science amidst the tumultuous politics of Kwame Nkrumah’s overthrow by the US Central Intelligence Agency. Owing to an early political awakening that crystallized during his years at Achimota School, he was already a nationally known and articulate voice in the early 1960s through two articles —“Free Our Schools From Imperialism” (1963) and “Let’s Be Alive To Africa’s Revolution” (1964)— that he published in the far-reaching national newspaper, The Ghanaian Times. Caught in the maelstrom of reactionary military rule after February 1966, it took him until 1970 to leave Ghana for East Africa where he attended Makerere University on a two-year scholarship for an M.A. degree. Following the chaos of Idi Amin’s military coup d’etat in early 1971, he moved to Toronto, Canada where he enrolled and completed doctoral studies in Political Science at York University. ==Career==
His teaching career started at the University of the West Indies in Trinidad & Tobago (1975-1976). From there, he moved via the University of Dar es Salaam (1976-1977), the University of California at Berkeley (1977-1979), Cornell University (1979-1982) to Montclair State University in September 1982. He also took up Visiting Professor appointments at Bard College (1982), Drew University (1989), and Fairleigh Dickinson University (1994-1995).
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