“Linking cultural rhetorics, African politics, and deliberation, Dadugblor examines court challenges to Ghana’s 2012 election and delivers impressive, innovative analyses of documentary evidence, digital publics, genre politics, public commentary, and the tensions between freedom of speech and citizen relationships. In doing so, he expands our knowledge of deliberation as a global, democratic activity, focusing our attention on its traditions and foundations within cultures. Dadugblor’s exploration of the local demonstrates the limitations of Western norms, as it examines the complex vectors—social, historical, political, economic, legal—that create cultural imaginaries and more capacious visions of the public sphere. This book has vital implications for cultural, digital, and African rhetorics, as well as deliberative, democratic, and postcolonial theory.” —Arabella Lyon, author of Deliberative Acts: Democracy, Rhetoric, and Rights