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Constitution of Ghana

Timeline
Since its independence in 1957, Ghana has undergone several major changes in both the type of government and the democratic government itself. Ghana was first declared a Republic in 1960 under the premiership of Kwame Nkrumah. By 1964, Ghana had transitioned from a republic to a one-party state with a presidential system where rights of the citizenry were eroded and political participation completely banned. Ghana would have an unstable political environment with several military takeovers in 1966, 1972, 1978, 1979, and 1981 despite the establishment of democratic administrations in 1969 and 1979. On April 28th 1992, a referendum was launched that approved the 1992 Constitution forming the current Ghanian Fourth Republic. The 1992 Constitution was based upon the democratic principles established by the 1957, 1969, and 1979 Constitutions as well as 258 member Committee of Experts, who submitted a slew of Constitutional proposals that would be approved by the Consultative Assembly. The 1992 Constitution provided for the greater freedom of the press and human rights guarantees, a similar executive branch to the US with the president being elected in four-year terms, and the reinforcement of a unitary government while allowing for local governments. The Fourth Republic's first government was officially sworn in on January 7th, 1993.

First Republic
Ghana's 1957 Constitution resembled the parliamentary democracy of Britain: where executive power was vested in the Queen and the Governor-General as her representative; the Cabinet was composed of members of Parliament; and Parliament as the main legislative that controlled Ghana's Government. The Constitution of 1957 formed Regional Assemblies: guaranteeing the establishment of the office of the Chief, "House of Chiefs" for each Region, and State Council to determine constitutional matters within the Region.

Second Republic
Ghana's Second Republic Constitution was drafted in Janruary of 1968. The Constitution holds the view that the traditional separations of power are outdated and it is the job of the President to preserve the independence of institutions. The executive is indepedent from the legislative and judiciary branches of government. The Second Republic Constitution used a decentralized form of government, where the local administrations served as extensions to the central government, which set the local administration's prerogative.

Third Repiblic
Before the inauguration of the first government of the Third Republic Constitution, Ghana established a "National Government" that would rule as a transitory government for "at least" four years. The Third Republic instituted a decentralized style of government through the creation of regional commissioners with cabinet standings, controlling the policy initiative of the locality and ideally balancing ethnic interests. The constitution established a provision that protected media outlets against censorship and afforded equal opportunities in state-run media outlets.

Preamble
The introductory statement of the Ghanian constitution. Guarantees the Principle of Universal Adult Suffrage; Freedom; Justice, Probity, and Accountability; and the protection and preservation of Fundamental Human Rights and Freedoms, United and Stability. The 1992 constitution drew primarily from the lessons from the previous 1957, 1960, 1969 and the 1979 constitutions and the British and United States constitution models, the preamble states clearly what the 1992 Ghanian Constitution will employ when incorporated as the supreme law of Ghana.

Article 11
Article 11 establishes that Ghanian law shall be compromised of the Constitution, legislation, subsidiary or subordinate legislation, existing laws before the 1992 Constitution, and finally common law. This article establishes where Ghanian Law would be derived from and by extension made. Article 11 establishes each governmental branch's contribution to the legislation and judiciary.

Article 17
Article 17 of the Ghanian Constitution directly addresses the issue of inequality and the illegality of discrimination based on the "grounds of gender, race, colour, ethnic origin, religion, creed or economic status. Section 3 of Article 17 defines discrimination as the "means to give different persons attributable only or mainly to their respective descriptions by race, place of origin, political opinions, colour, gender occupation, religion or creed, whereby persons of one description are subjected or restrictions." Article 17 legally defines the broad term of "discrimination," applying the concept of Universal Adult Suffrage to the basis of Ghanian national law.

Article 24
Article 24 establishes the economic rights of the Ghanian citizenry. Clauses 1 and 2 establishes the right to work under satisfactory, safe, healthy conditions, and equal pay with the assurance of days off when requested and on public holidays. Additionally, Article 24 clause 3 grants the right of the Ghanian citizenry to form or join trade unions for the "promotion and protection of his economic and social interests."

Article 25
Article 25 describes the rights to education in Ghana. Clause 1 establishes the right of the Ghanian citizenry to have access to equal education opportunities and the facilities are needed. Subclauses a to e of Article 25 detail how basic education is compulsory and free; secondary education will be accessible to all its citizenry; higher education will be accessible for all on the basis of the respective university's capacity to hold students; establishes the right to literacy; and the right for the school system to be granted adequate facilities to teach. Clause 2 grants the rights for the citizenry to homeschool and establish private schools in accordance with the rights to education established by clause 1.

Article 29
Article 29 establishes the rights of the disabled to access educational opportunities and protections against institutional abuse. Clauses 1 to 4 describe the rights of the disabled and detail the disabled's protections against discrimination and abuse as defined by Article 17 of the constitution. Clause 5 guarantees the disabled as a party in their own judicial proceeding while factoring the court factors in the disabled person's mental and physical capacity. Clauses 6 and 8 guarantees the right of the disabled to have access to public and private facilities without discrimination, with clause 7 establishing special incentives for business that engage or employ disabled people in significant numbers. Clause 8 establishes that parliament shall laws ensure the enforcement of Article 29 and all of its clauses.

Article 41
Article 41 urges the duties on the individual Ghanian citizens and states that the exercise of rights and freedoms, guaranteed in the Constitution, are inseparable from the citizen's performance of their duties. Duty in Article 41 encompasses civil, political, economic, social, and cultural practices Ghanaians engage in.