John Osae-Kwapong holds a Ph.D. in Political Science from George Mason University, a master’s degree in public administration from Clark Atlanta University and a Bachelor of Arts degree in Political Science from Houghton College. He has spent the last 15 years of his career serving in leadership roles in US higher education. Some of the institutions he has worked for include University of Findlay, Hofstra University, Columbia University, and Nassau Community College.

Dr. Osae-Kwapong also has extensive teaching experience in the area of research methods and data analysis, political economy, comparative politics, public administration and international relations.

He is a fellow with the Ghana Center for Democratic Development (CDD-Ghana), a member of the iRIS Research Consortium, and Project Director of a nonprofit initiative called Research Methods Made Easy.

  • 5 Presidents, 8 Elections, 30 Years Later: How Ghanaians See Their Democracy

    Ghana’s Fourth Republic, a multiparty democracy, has seen five presidents, held eight successful elections and, as of this writing, is in its thirtieth year. This makes it unique in several ways, compared to previous attempts at multiparty democracy, in that it is the longest-lasting republic so far in the country’s post-independence history. It has outlived the first, second, and third republics combined by more than eighteen years.
    What explains this unique period and change in the political trajectory of Ghana? Why has the country’s most recent attempt at multiparty democracy lasted this long?
    Drawing on answers to questions in the Afrobarometer survey, administered nine times at periodic intervals between 1999 and 2022, this book describes in twenty themes and fifty-one observations, how Ghanaians see their democracy. The book covers themes such as trust in institutions, partisanship, support for democracy, governments handling of the policy priorities of Ghanaians, among many others. The book points out the key lessons of the last thirty and the challenges ahead in the country’s efforts to deepen democratic governance.

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