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ghana think tank
The Ghana ThinkTank
Solving the First World's problems, one by one

The Ghana ThinkTank is a globally distributed network of think tanks creating strategies to resolve local problems. The network began with think tanks from Ghana, Cuba and El Salvador, and has since expanded to include Serbia, Mexico and Ethiopia. We are currently negotiating with groups in Iran and Nigeria.

The Ghana ThinkTank is not about broad superlatives or generalized utopias, but uses the power of alternative perspectives to pull solutions from often surprising places.

With a track record in Liverpool England, East Village New York, Providence Rhode Island, Boston Massachusetts, and Westport Connecticut, the Ghana ThinkTank is focused on you: your community, your problems, and your personal actions.

Take charge, send us your problems.

news

Visit the Ghana Think Tank blog for our latest news.

Ghana Think Tank: Finalist for Rhizome Commissions 2010

The Ghana Think Tank is a Finalist for Rhizome Commissions 2010. If you are a Rhizome member, and you support our project, vote now to rank Ghana Think Tank number 1 for the Member awards. View our proposal here.

Ghana Think Tank in Liverpool

http://gtt.christopher-robbins.com/liverpool/

The Ghana Think Tank, Liverpool. Christopher Robbins, John Ewing and Matey Odonkor (2009)

From March - May 2009, the Ghana Think Tank operated at FACT, the Foundation for Art and Creative Technology, in Liverpool, UK. Problems submitted by Liverpudlians were sent to think tanks in Cuba, El Salvador, Mexico, Serbia, and Ethiopia, and their solutions were acted on back in Liverpool.

Solutions ranged from tough (building cement bollards to stop parking on sidewalks), to humiliating (installing a kitty-litter box for dogs in a public park) to fun (painting the undersides of umbrellas with sunshine and then doing sunny-day things in the rain) to unfamiliar (teaching drug addicts to build African instruments out of found materials, so they can play them to earn money while gouching "... instead a robbing.")

You can follow some of the Liverpool problems, solutions and actions through the blog, photos and video.

We were there as part of a group show on UNsustainability (Climate for Change) including Stefan Szczelkun, N55, Eyebeam, Melanie Gilligan and AIDS-3D, curated by Heather Corcoran.

Ghana Think Tank in Massachussets

The Ghana Think tank was in Boston as part of the RISD Alumni Biennial at the Arsenal Center for the Arts, January - March 2009.

Ghana Think Tank in Westport

http://gtt.christopher-robbins.com/westport/

As part of the Optimism show, curated by Michael Connor at the Westport Art Center from September 26 - November 30, 2008, Christopher Robbins, John Ewing and Matey Odonkor installed the second iteration of the Ghana Think Tank. This time, problems submitted by Westport citizens were sent to ad-hoc think tanks formed in Ghana, Mexico, El Salvador and Serbia. The solutions provided by these think tanks, including hiring Immigrants to attend Westport events in order to improve diversity, renaming a dog "love" to get him to stop barking, a dandelion promotion campaign, and whatever else may arise, are enacted in Westport throughout the duration of the show.

You can follow some of the problems and actions through the blog, photos, and video.

Ghana Think Tank in Providence

http://gtt.christopher-robbins.com/

The Ghana Think Tank started in Providence in 2006, founded by Christopher Robbins, John Ewing and Matey Odonkor. We sent a set of problems to think tanks we formed in Ghana, Cuba and El Salvador. After receiving the think tanks' solutions, we began to enact them.

The project began as an attempt to transpose parts of one culture into another, to take a solution generated in one context and apply it elsewhere. The hope is that the friction caused by these misapplications would generate interesting results, and that we could learn something further about our own assumptions as well as those of our counterparts in the other countries.

As such, the focus of the Ghana Think Tank is not the resolution of these problems per se, but on the gaps of translation that occur within the process as a way of uncovering our hidden assumptions.