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Recent Reforms in Ghana's Family Law

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  28 July 2009

Extract

On 14 June, 1985, the Provisional National Defence Council of Ghana promulgated a series of laws designed to give better security for widows and their children, provide an effective machinery for the registration of customary marriage and divorce and render heads of family statutorily accountable to their members. They are: Intestate Succession Law, Customary Marriage and Divorce Registration Law and Head of Family (Accountability) Law. There is no doubt that the enactment of these laws marks a significant turning point and a new concept of family property law, even though the impact of the laws is yet to permeate into the social fabric of the Ghanaian community as a whole.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © School of Oriental and African Studies 1987

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References

1 P.N.D.C. Laws 111, 112, 114, 1985.

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25 It is also in fulfilment of the Christian saying that “What God has joined together let no man put asunder”.

26 P.N.D.C. Law 112, ss. 6–8.

27 A report in the weekly magazine The Mirror of 11 01, 1986 is apposite:Google Scholar “From June last year when the Customary Marriage and Divorce Registration law was promulgated by the P.N.D.C. till November forms for the registration of such marriages were not available“. Another strong factor debarring people” wrote a correspondent in the People's Daily Graphic, 23 04, 1987,Google Scholar “is the payment of a registration fee of ₡1,000·00 which is too high, considering the numerous marriages expected to be registered”.

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