“…Overall, it has been argued that in West Africa, education ‘remain[s] the most important determinant of class status’ (Budniok & Noll, 2018: 129), though feeding into different dynamics over time: Producing ‘hometown’ leaders engaged regional development in the 1930–1940s; incorporating national elites in the 1950–1960s; and since the 1970–1980s becoming a more uncertain route to security (Behrends & Lentz, 2012), with tertiary education now the ‘entry requirement’ into ‘the middle’. Considering this ‘middle’, scholars have grappled with the fact that it is clearly important to analyse the dynamics of social status in contemporary Africa, particularly the growth of heterogeneous ‘middling’ groups, yet measures of class based on income and expenditure, or Eurocentric models, are inadequate given the enduring importance of rural–urban ties, ethnic and religious networks, and cross‐class kinship groups to the way resources are shared and status is conferred (Lentz, 2015; Neubert, 2022; Scharrer et al., 2018). Rather than broad discussions of ‘the African middle classes’, there have been calls for specific analyses of how various groups are ‘doing class’ as ‘a bundle of social practices that may or may not be conscious, but that create and mark differences’ (Lentz, 2015: 41).…”