Audio By Carbonatix
IMANI has become the only African think tank among six think tanks from Brazil, Canada, Mexico, U.S. and Ghana named finalists for 2017 Templeton Freedom Award.
"IMANI demonstrates the vital role that civil society organizations can play in making government leaders more accountable to citizens,” said Atlas Network CEO, Brad Lips.
“Its IMANIFesto Campaign finally forces politicians to reconcile their campaign rhetoric with the real-world trade-offs that face policymakers in office," Brad adds.
The IMANIFesto campaign was broad in its digital reach – over 4 million watched the broadcast of the report launch. IMANIFesto reached more than 2 million Facebook users and 1 million Twitter users from August and November 2016. And it had more than 20 direct media placements on radio, traditional, electronic, and state-run media outlets. A famous cartoonist even published a cartoon called “Manifesto Inspector” in the Daily Graphic, Ghana’s most read newspaper, depicting IMANI President Franklin Cudjoe scrutinizing the political promises from the leaders of major political parties.
The impact of the IMANIFesto project is undeniable.
It provided a country an easy-to-consume information about the issues of the election and the viability of the various political promises from each party and, according to Kenneth Ashigbey, Editor-in-Chief and Managing Director of the Daily Graphic newspaper, it functioned as “a barometer of legitimacy for the masses.”
This allowed the 2016 election to transcend its usual partisan, religious, and tribal lines. IMANI’s work also forced party leaders to revise their party manifestos to increase their feasibility and thus their attractiveness to the electorate. IMANI is even working with think tanks in Nigeria to duplicate this work for Nigerian elections.
The campaign, on the whole, had a dual effect: first, it educated an electorate that previously lacked access to information about the various campaign promises of political parties that preyed upon such a lack of access, and second, it induced those parties to revise their poorly formulated platforms or risk being punished by voters at the ballot box.
Latest Stories
-
Salah-Mane rivalry renewed in AFCON semi-finals
4 hours -
What does Trump’s foreign policy mean for World Cup?
5 hours -
Carrick confirmed as Man Utd caretaker head coach
5 hours -
CPS & JoyNews to hold public lecture on Ghana’s move to back currency with gold
5 hours -
Africa Education Watch supports calls for review of SHS teachers’ manual, curricula over gender controversy
6 hours -
Ntim Fordjour demands review of SHS teachers’ manual over gender controversy
6 hours -
GCB Bank hands over renovated dormitory to TAMASCO
6 hours -
Nkyinkyim Band to headline Ghana Independence celebration in London
6 hours -
NPP leadership has lost touch with grassroot – Dr Nyaho-Tamekloe
6 hours -
IGP’s Team nabs drug suspects in Tamale swoop; seizes cash, narcotics
6 hours -
NaCCA revises teacher manual, withdraws ‘gender definition’ content deemed contrary to Ghanaian values
7 hours -
Ntim Fordjour condemns gov’t over gender definition in curriculum
7 hours -
NPP must develop thick skin for criticism – Dr Asah-Asante
7 hours -
Auditor-General raises alarm over 2,000+ weapon interceptions at airports
7 hours -
Motorists lament years of faulty traffic lights at Poku Transport Junction
8 hours
