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Title
Government intervention in chieftaincy matters in Ghana. |
Full text
http://dspace.knust.edu.gh/dspace/handle/123456789/986 |
Date
1990 |
Author(s)
OBENG-MANU |
Abstract
Evidence in the form of oral tradition or recorded history is not wanting in demonstrating the fact that all institutions in Ghana the most ancient as well as the most indigenous is the institute of chieftaincy. As such it is shrouded in tradition otherwise called customary law and usage. The quest for progress in contemporary Ghana has however brought to light the pressing need for a purposeful shake-up in the institution through the instrumentality of law, with modernizing overtones and undertones in order to save it from sinking into obsolescence and practical irrelevance. The burden of the present paper is to examine briefly how the Provisional National Defence Council (P.N.D.C.) government has been, and is responding the the needed shake-up. In the process it will be argued that it is eminently desirable for the government to intervene, but otherwise for government to interfere, in chieftaincy matters. |
Subject(s)
Government intervention in; chieftaincy matters in Ghana. |
Publisher
KNUST |
Identifier
0855-0395 |
Repository
Kumasi - Kwame Nkrumah University
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Added to C-A: 2010-04-22;10:41:55 |
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