Godfred Yeboah Dame | |
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Assumed office January 2021 | |
President | Nana Akufo-Addo |
Preceded by | Gloria Akuffo |
Deputy Attorney-General and Deputy Minister for Justice |
Kissi Agyebeng | |
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Born | William Kissi Agyebeng 2 July 1978 Ghana |
Education | Accra Academy |
Alma mater | University of Ghana Ghana School of Law Schulich School of Law Cornell Law School |
Matthew Rodriguez | 2021 – 2021 |
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Kamala D. Harris | 2010 – 2017 |
Edmund G. Brown, Jr. | 2007 – 2011 |
Bill Lockyer | 1999 – 2007 |
Daniel E. Lungren | 1991 – 1999 |
The policy objectives of the Legal Aid Scheme have remained the same. They are derived from Article 294 of the Constitution and the Legal Aid Scheme Act, 1997 (Act 542).
The Copyright Office is the Government Agency responsible for the implementation of the copyright and related statutes and regulations.
The Attorney General is responsible for any civil cases and acts as the defendant on behalf of Ghana.
Ako-Adjei then became the first Minister of Justice for Ghana from 1957 to 1958. The Ministry was responsible for the functions of the Land Boundaries Settlement Commission, financial and ministerial matters with relation to the Supreme Court, local court and Customary Law, and foreign processes. In 1958, the ministry was merged with ...
Following Ghana's independence in 1957, the Ministry of Interior and Justice was split to form the Ministry of Justice (becoming a ministry on its own) and the Ministry Interior. This time, the Ministry of Justice did not oversee the Attorney General department as a Ministry for the Attorney General had been created on 7 August 1957 ...
The Ministry of Justice was created in 1951 after the Lidbury Commission was established to come up with recommendations upon reviewing the Gold Coast Civil Service. The commission established that the establishment of ministries by the then newly established Gold Coast government, headed by Kwame Nkrumah ...
In October 1998, Nana Akufo-Addo competed for the presidential candidacy of the NPP and lost to John Kufuor, the man who eventually won the December 2000 presidential election and assumed office as President of Ghana in January 2001. Akufo-Addo was the chief campaigner for candidate Kufuor in the 2000 election and became the first Attorney General and Minister for Justice of the Kufuor era.
Akufo-Addo also served as Chair of the Commonwealth Observer Mission for the South African elections in 2014. He was elected President of Ghana in the December 7 elections, after obtaining 53.85% of the total valid votes cast, as announced by the Electoral Commission.
Akufo-Addo stayed in France for five years as a lawyer at the now-defunct New York-based international law firm, Coudert Brothers. Apart from the welcome exposure to the dynamics of international corporate transactions, his stay in France also made him fluent in French.
This group led the “NO” campaign in the UNIGOV referendum of 1978, designed to solicit popular support for a one-party military-led State. The “No” campaign ultimately brought about the downfall of the Acheampong military government on 5 July 1978, and the restoration of multiparty democratic rule to the country in 1979.
In 1991, Akufo-Addo was the chairman of the Organising Committee of the Danquah-Busia Memorial Club , a club dedicated to the preservation of the memory and ideals of the two great advocates of Ghanaian democracy, J. B. Danquah and K. A.
In the first round, Akufo-Addo received 4,159,439 votes, representing 49.13% of the votes cast, placing him first, but not enough for the 50% needed for an outright victory. It was the best-ever performance for a first-time presidential candidate in the Fourth Republic.
In his early thirties, Akufo-Addo was the General Secretary of the broad-based People’s Movement for Freedom and Justice (PMFJ), which was composed of political stalwarts such as Akwasi Amankwa Afrifa, William Ofori-Atta, Komla Agbeli Gbedemah, Albert Adu Boahen, Sam Okudzeto, Obed Asamoah, Godfrey Agama, K. S. P. Jantuah, Jones Ofori-Atta, Johnny Hanson and Nii Amaah Amartefio (“Mr. No”). This group led the “NO” campaign in the UNIGOV referendum of 1978, designed to solicit popular support for a one-party military-led State. The “No” campaign ultimately brought about the downfall of the Acheampong military government on 5 July 1978, and the restoration of multiparty democratic rule to the country in 1979. Akufo-Addo had to go briefly into exile after the referendum, when his life was in danger. But, from Europe, he could be heard constantly on the BBC World Service, vigorously criticising the military rulers back in Ghana and calling for a return to democracy. He is acknowledged as one of the leaders of the pro-democracy movement in Ghana.
Justice Joyce Bamford-Addo (2009-2013) The soft-spoken retired Supreme Court judge was born on March 26, 1937. She broke the glass ceiling to become Ghana’s first female Speaker of Parliament on the back of a decorated public service, spanning more than 40 years.
The man who was just six months old when Ghana became independent in March 1957 was one of 200 MPs elected in 1992 when Ghana decided to return to multiparty democracy after 11 years in the throes of military rule. The legal practitioner went through the legislative mill in the last 29 years from the Chairman of the Subsidiary Committee in ...