Audio By Carbonatix
The African Women Lawyers Association-Ghana (AWLA-Ghana) on Wednesday convened a high-level consultative forum in Accra to set priority areas and define the agenda for the upcoming National Family Law and Justice Conference.

The forum drew more than 100 participants, including judges, legal practitioners, policymakers, civil society leaders, and gender advocates.
The goal was to validate and refine the thematic focus of the conference, while identifying key institutional challenges and gaps in the implementation of family law in Ghana.
Discussions also centered on strengthening inter-agency collaboration, generating preliminary proposals for policy and legislative reform, and securing institutional buy-in and leadership support ahead of the national conference. During breakout and plenary sessions, participants were divided into working groups to deliberate on critical areas of family law.

Topics covered included marriage, spousal support and divorce processes; domestic violence prevention, response and protection mechanisms; adoption, child custody and maintenance; welfare and protection of vulnerable persons; access to justice and legal aid services; inheritance and succession; assisted reproductive technology and surrogacy; and property rights of spouses.

The forum featured contributions from prominent legal minds and advocates. Among them were Member of the Council of State and former Attorney General, Betty Mould-Iddrisu; Dr. Mrs. Angela Dwamena-Aboagye Esq.; Justice Dorothy Kingsley Nyinah; Prof. Renee Morhe; Mrs. Irene Aborchie-Nyahe, Esq.; Vivien Lamptey, Esq.; Mr. Dennis Adjei-Dwomoh, Esq.; Mrs. Ruby Aglagoh; Mr. Daniel Goka of CAA; and Marian Darlington.
AWLA-Ghana is the Ghanaian chapter of the African Women Lawyers Association, an international non-governmental organization made up primarily of women lawyers.
The parent body, AWLA International, was co-founded in 1997 in Nairobi by Ghanaian legal icon Betty Mould-Iddrisu.

While AWLA-Ghana works locally, it also connects to regional and global legal advocacy networks, including engagement with United Nations and African Union systems.
The organization collaborates with other women’s rights groups across Ghana to protect and promote the rights of women and children through legal advocacy, public education, and policy reform.

Outcomes from Wednesday’s forum will directly inform the structure and agenda of the upcoming National Family Law and Justice Conference, which aims to push for reforms that make Ghana’s family justice system more responsive, equitable, and accessible.
Latest Stories
-
Anti-LGBTQ+ Bill in its present state falls short of expectations – Pentecostal and Charismatic Council
32 seconds -
Como 1907 players welcomed at Italian Ambassador’s residence in Ghana
2 minutes -
GJA Ashanti Chair advocates closer media-research partnership
3 minutes -
Comply with rules, regulations governing internal elections – NPP tells USA branch
3 minutes -
Savannah Health Service confirms missing newborn at Salaga Hospital
3 minutes -
World Cup 2026: Julius Malema ‘jumped’ in attempt to rally Africa behind Bafana Bafana
54 minutes -
Phoenix Insurance donates computers to Korle Bu Teaching Hospital, calls for greater support for healthcare
2 hours -
Seventeen months on, Mahama’s pledge to end Accra floods runs dry
2 hours -
AWLA-Ghana holds consultative forum to shape National Family Law and Justice Conference
2 hours -
Nigerian youths: Stop facebooking and face the book
2 hours -
Leadership, Accountability, and the KATH CEO suspension: Reflections on Ghana’s healthcare governance
3 hours -
Government repatriates 327 stranded Ghanaians from Côte d’Ivoire
3 hours -
World Cup qualification will deliver significant economic benefits to Ghana
3 hours -
ASEC urges major reforms after Akosombo Substation fire investigation
3 hours -
NDC achieved democratic objective with presidential term limit—Majority Leader
3 hours