Audio By Carbonatix
The National Association of Law Students has launched a scathing attack on the governing New Patriotic Party (NPP)’s proposed policy to reform legal education.
The group says the plan is not a reflection of recent global developments making it "awkward, misleading, retrogressive, and very weak."
The Group, however, describes the opposition National Democratic Congress (NDC)’s proposed solution as "giving hope, more caring, and believable".

Law students across the country have in the last four years been demanding that legal education is made accessible to all.
Hundreds of Law degree graduates have failed to gain admission to the Ghana School of Law, the only accredited institution allowed to run a professional law program.
While poor performance in the entrance exam has often been blamed, the students argue that the lack of adequate space at the school is the reason many are not passed.
The students have demonstrated and demanded that faculties of law across the country be allowed to run the professional program.
Proposal a solution, the NPP on page 155 of its 2020 manifesto said it will rather expand infrastructure and increase access to the professional program.
On the other hand, on page 75 of its 2020 manifesto, the NDC is pledging to accredit law faculties to run the program, establish a council of legal education to accredit such institution and establish a law faculty in the Northern Region.

Comparing the two promises, a CDD Fellow in Public Law and Justice, Prof. Stephen Asare who has been at the forefront of the fight to open up legal education said, the NDC's promises are in line with the demands of the students.
“On the issue of making legal education accessible, it is fair to say the NDC has done more listening than the NPP and has offered a far superior solution to the problem.
"Universities, not some centralised government school, should be in charge of legal education," he said.
Latest Stories
-
GH¢30bn Big Push Programme to strengthen Ghana’s infrastructure in 2026 – EM Advisory
6 seconds -
Services sector to drive Ghana’s baseline 4.8% growth in 2026 – EM Advisory
41 seconds -
Education Minister appeals for end to university staff strike, confirms partial payment of arrears
4 minutes -
British International Investment reinforces commitment to Ghana’s private sector with high‑level leadership visit
7 minutes -
Major General Joseph Narh Adinkrah
17 minutes -
Ghana eyes 4.8% GDP growth in 2026 amid commodity gains and fiscal discipline – EM Advisory
20 minutes -
GRIDCO serves notice of a load redistribution exercise in parts of Volta region
22 minutes -
Tourism and Creative Arts could boost Ghana’s 2026 growth – EM Advisory projects
23 minutes -
Food insecurity rises to 38.1%; 12.5m Ghanaians struggle to access food—GSS
26 minutes -
Mahama opens 66th WACS Conference, calls for stronger surgical capacity in West Africa
26 minutes -
ECG steps up infrastructure investment to deliver reliable power nationwide
27 minutes -
Daily Insight for CEOs: Setting clear performance expectations
30 minutes -
Mothers wrap cleft-lipped babies in polythene to avoid stigma – National Cleft care
42 minutes -
No drumming or dancing at airports without approval – GACL warns
45 minutes -
Tema Central NDC executives lock up NHIS office over alleged exclusionary appointments
54 minutes
