Safeguarding Democracy and Human Rights: The Role of Ghana’s Judiciary
Authors
Department of Mathematics & ICT Education, E. P. College of Education, Bimbilla Ghana (Ghana)
High Court, Tamale, Northern Region Ghana (Ghana)
Center for Emerging Media Design and Development, Ball State University, Muncie (USA)
Article Information
DOI: 10.47772/IJRISS.2026.100300216
Subject Category: Human Resources
Volume/Issue: 10/3 | Page No: 2938-2944
Publication Timeline
Submitted: 2026-03-10
Accepted: 2026-03-19
Published: 2026-04-01
Abstract
This paper examines how the judiciary in Ghana has contributed to safeguarding democracy and human rights as enshrined in the 1992 Constitution. The aim was to assess the role of constitutional enforcement, electoral decision-making and the protection of rights in consolidating democracy, as well as to identify institutional challenges and reform options. A total of 122 primary and secondary sources, including constitutional provisions, landmark decisions and academic publications by the judiciary and peer-reviewed academic sources published from 1992 to 2025 were consulted. Data collection was carried out by combining a doctrinal analysis of the Constitution and case law with a thematic analysis of institutional documents and academic commentaries. The review has been structured in five areas: constitutional implementation, electoral conduct, human rights, institutional constraints and the path to reform. The results show that the judiciary has played a key role in democratic consolidation, ruling on petitions for presidential elections in 2013 and 2021, developing human rights law and participating in the control of unconstitutional state actions. Specialised courts and e-justice systems are reforms which have improved access to justice in selected jurisdictions. However, the judiciary continues to face such challenges as lack of funding, large backlogs of cases, perception of corruption, political interference in appointments and a loss of trust in the judiciary. These restrictions limit the capacity of the judiciary to fulfil its constitutional mandate. The document finds that the judiciary in Ghana remains a core of democratic stability, but that its performance is determined by resources and independence as well as legitimacy. Some key recommendations include isolating judicial appointments from political considerations, ring fencing budget allocations, strengthening case management systems, promoting civic education to restore confidence and enforcing accountability and ethical standards.
Keywords
Judiciary, Democracy, Human rights, Constitutional enforcement
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