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Constitution of the Republic of Ghana (1969)
Constitution of the Republic of Ghana (1969)
₵48.75 -
1992 Constitution of the Republic of Ghana (Hardcover)
1992 Constitution of the Republic of Ghana Hardcover
Note the colour of the Cover of the book may differ as seen.₵120.00 -
1992 Constitution of the Republic of Ghana (Small Size)
1992 Constitution of the Republic of Ghana
₵24.38 -
Labour Act, 2003 (Act 651)
The Six Hundred and fifty-first ACT of the Parliament of the Republic of Ghana is an Act to amend and consolidate the laws relating to labour, employers, trade unions and industrial relations; to establish a National Labour Commission and to provide for matters related to these.
₵97.50Labour Act, 2003 (Act 651)
₵97.50 -
Criminal and Other Offences (Procedure) (Amendment) Act, 2022 (Act 1079)
Criminal and Other Offences (Procedure) (Amendment) Act, 2022 (Act 1079)
₵26.00 -
Development Finance Institutions Act, 2020 (Act 1032)
Development Finance Institutions Act, 2020 (Act 1032)
₵130.00 -
Akenten Appiah-Menka University of Skills Training and Entrepreneurial Development Act, 2020 (Act 1026)
Akenten Appiah-Menka University of Skills Training and Entrepreneurial Development Act, 2020 (Act 1026)
₵115.00 -
Narcotics Control Commission Act, 2020 (Act 1019)
Narcotics Control Commission Act, 2020 (Act 1019)
₵146.25 -
Simon Diedong Dombo University of Business and International Development Studies Act, 2019 (Act 1001)
Simon Diedong Dombo University of Business and International Development Studies Act, 2019(Act 1001)
₵42.25 -
Colleges of Education Act, 2012 (Act 847)
Colleges Of Education Act 2012 (Act 847)
₵19.50 -
Local Governance Act, 2016: With Amendments Act 940 (Act 936)
Local Governance Act, 2016: With Amendments Act 940 (Act 936)
₵143.00 -
Criminal Offences Act, 1960 (Act 29)
Criminal Offences Act, 1960 (Act 29)
₵120.00 -
The Ghana Constitution: Order in Council (1957)
The Ghana Constitution: Order in Council (1957)
₵32.50 -
An Outline of Islamic Customary Law In Ghana
This is an altogether original work in a virgin field. About two decades ago, the Faculty of Law of the University of Ghana (the only in existence at the time in the country), introduced the study of Islamic law as an aspect or jurisprudence. The decision was informed by the reality of a significant Muslim segment of the Ghanaian population. It was a brave decision. The halls of academia had never resounded to Islamic law concepts; for up to that point Islamic law was treated as a Cinderella with no place in the legal curriculum, save for a few passing references in regard to marriage and succession laws. Almost single-handedly, I set about developing a corpus of Islamic customary law relevant to the needs of Ghanaian law students. This small volume is the result of efforts to put my thoughts in essay form and to make available to students and the wider public a book-length manual on the nature of Islamic customary law in Ghana. By obtaining and analysing data elicited from community leaders, ordinary Muslims and clerics and evaluating them in the light of settled principles of Sharia law, a distinctly Ghanaian brand of Muslim law emerges. At appropriate points, material derived from court verdicts is interwoven into the text. No attempt has been made here to deal with other systems of Ghanaian family law other than the Islamic.
The author has attempted to present the Muslim laws of family, property and succession within a reasonable compass to aid appreciation of the personal laws of substantial numbers of Ghanaians; and in a form that will be clearly understood.
Aside from Law 111 and the Marriage of Mohammedans Ordinance, Cap 129 (1951 Rev.), Islamic law has been subject to no comprehensive legislative reform. This is perhaps to be expected as the practised law of Muslims was frequently misunderstood, and hardly recognised and understood by administrators and legislators.
The author’s purpose will have been achieved if this book helps to free Islamic law from misconceptions common in our society.
₵250.00 -
Truth Without Reconciliation: A Human Rights History of Ghana (Pennsylvania Studies in Human Rights)
Although truth and reconciliation commissions are supposed to generate consensus and unity in the aftermath of political violence, Abena Ampofoa Asare identifies cacophony as the most valuable and overlooked consequence of this process in Ghana. By collecting and preserving the voices of a diverse cross-section of the national population, Ghana’s National Reconciliation Commission (2001-2004) created an unprecedented public archive of postindependence political history as told by the self-described victims of human rights abuse.
The collected voices in the archives of this truth commission expand Ghana’s historic record by describing the state violence that seeped into the crevices of everyday life, shaping how individuals and communities survived the decades after national independence. Here, victims of violence marshal the language of international human rights to assert themselves as experts who both mourn the past and articulate the path toward future justice.
There are, however, risks as well as rewards for dredging up this survivors’ history of Ghana. The revealed truth of Ghana’s human rights history is the variety and dissonance of suffering voices. These conflicting and conflicted records make it plain that the pursuit of political reconciliation requires, first, reckoning with a violence that is not past but is preserved in national institutions and individual lives. By exploring the challenge of human rights testimony as both history and politics, Asare charts a new course in evaluating the success and failures of truth and reconciliation commissions in Africa and around the world.₵180.00