GHANA'S NEED FOR SOCIOLOGICAL JURISPRUDENCE: A CRITICAL APPLICATION OF ROSCOE POUND'S THEORY

https://doi.org/10.47963/ucclj.v4i2.1718

Authors

  • Elijah Tukwariba Yin University of Cape Coast
  • Peter Atudiwe Atupare University of Ghana

Keywords:

Ghana, Jurisprudence, Sociological, Legal Reform, Legal Education

Abstract

This paper critically examines the applicability and relevance of Roscoe Pound’s sociological jurisprudence to the legal and educational systems of Ghana. It argues that while Ghana’s legal architecture is constitutionally sound and institutionally robust, it remains constrained by inherited colonial formalism, doctrinal rigidity, and cultural alienation. Drawing on Pound’s foundational thesis, law must function as a tool for social engineering rather than a self-contained doctrinal system. The paper assesses Ghana’s jurisprudential trajectory and identifies a critical need to align legal norms, practices, and education with the socio-cultural realities of the Ghanaian populace. Through a desktop methodology grounded in doctrinal analysis and comparative legal theory, the study interrogates the formalism in judicial reasoning, the marginalization of customary law, and the doctrinal orthodoxy prevalent in legal education. It proposes a sociologically informed legal reform agenda encompassing interdisciplinary legal education, empirical legal research, and context-sensitive judicial interpretation. The study finds that integrating local knowledge systems, advancing community-based legal pedagogy, and democratizing access to justice are essential for the evolution of a Ghanaian legal system that is equitable, dynamic, and culturally responsive.

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

Author Biographies

Elijah Tukwariba Yin, University of Cape Coast

Senior Lecturer
Faculty of Law
University of Cape Coast

Peter Atudiwe Atupare, University of Ghana

Associate Professor
School of Law
University of Ghana

References

Adebisi, Foluke I., ed. Decolonisation and the Law School: Dreaming Beyond Aesthetic Changes to the Curriculum. Taylor & Francis, 2024.

Adebisi, Foluke I., ed. Decolonisation and the Law School: Dreaming Beyond Aesthetic Changes to the Curriculum. Taylor & Francis, 2024.

Aharon Barak, The Judge in a Democracy (Princeton University Press 2006).

Akoto, Augustina. "Marriage, the law and pluralism in Ghana." Research Handbook on Marriage, Cohabitation and the Law. Edward Elgar Publishing, 2024. 105-119.

Akua Kuenyehia, ‘Women, Marriage, and Intestate Succession in the Context of Legal Pluralism in Africa: The Ghanaian Experience’ (2006) University of Ghana Law Journal 23.

Ali, Muhammad Imran. "Bridging the Gap: Integrating Flipped Classrooms into Legal Education in Pakistan." Journal of Legal Studies “Vasile Goldiş” 33.47 (2024): 79-98.

Anthony Bradney, Conversations, Choices and Chances: The Liberal Law School in the Twenty-First Century (Hart Publishing 2003).

Asante, Samuel KB. "Interests in Land in the Customary Law of Ghana--A New Appraisal." Yale LJ 74 (1964): 848.

Atupare, Peter A. "Consolidating an integrated rights approach: socio-economic constitutional justice in Africa." International Journal of Public Law and Policy 9.4 (2023): 385-417.

Brian Bix, Jurisprudence: Theory and Context (8th edn, Sweet & Maxwell 2015) 137–141.

Bhaghamma, G. "A comparative analysis of doctrinal and non-doctrinal legal research." ILE Journal of Governance and Policy Review 1.1 (2023): 88-94.

Chimbwanda, Victor. Embedding Skills in African Customary Law and Culture in the LLB Curriculum: An Empirical Study of Pedagogical Approaches in Selected African University Law Schools. Diss. School of Advanced Study, 2022.

Dzodzi Tsikata, ‘Gender, Land and Labour Relations and Livelihoods in Sub-Saharan Africa: Ghana and the Land Tenure and Policy Conundrum’ (2009) ISSER 1.

Cotterrell, Roger. Law, culture and society: Legal ideas in the mirror of social theory. Routledge, 2017.

Flanagan, Rebecca. "Anthrogogy: Towards Inclusive Law School Learning." Conn. Pub. Int. LJ 19 (2019): 93.

Hammond, Ama F., and Prosper Batariwah. "An Assessment of the Doctrine of Commorientes and Its Implications for the Devolution of Testate and Intestate Property in Ghana." Journal of African Law 68.2 (2024): 263-281.

Hammond, Ama Fowa. Towards an inclusive vision of law reform and legal pluralism in Ghana. Diss. University of British Columbia, 2016.

Jean G Zorn, ‘Customary Law in the Post-Colonial State: Lessons from the Pacific, Northern Africa, and Ghana’ (2002) 21 Southern Cross University Law Review 79

Joyce, Yeboah. Decolonisation of Education: Rethinking Higher Education Curricula and Pedagogy in Ghana. MS thesis. Oslomet-storbyuniversitetet, 2023.

Kasim Kasanga and Nii Ashie Kotey, Land Management in Ghana: Building on Tradition and Modernity (International Institute for Environment and Development 2001)

Li, Mengyang. "Adapting legal education for the changing landscape of regional emerging economies: A dynamic framework for law majors." Journal of the Knowledge Economy 15.3 (2024): 10227-10256.

Manteaw, S. O. (2005). Clinical and Experiential Legal Education in Ghana: An Introduction and Proposals for Reform. U. Ghana LJ, 23, 55.

Mpuangnan, Kofi Nkonkonya, and Sithabile Ntombela. "Community voices in curriculum development." Curriculum Perspectives 44.1 (2024): 49-60.

Oakes, Anne Richardson, and Haydn Davies. "Justice must be seen to be done: a contextual reappraisal." Adelaide Law Review, The 37.2 (2016): 461-494.

Raymond Wacks, Understanding Jurisprudence: An Introduction to Legal Theory (5th edn, OUP 2019)

Roger Cotterrell, Law, Culture and Society: Legal Ideas in the Mirror of Social Theory (Ashgate 2006)

Roscoe Pound, ‘The Need of a Sociological Jurisprudence’ (1907) 19(6) Political Science Quarterly 607

Sesay, Mohamed. Domination through law: the internationalization of legal norms in postcolonial Africa. Rowman & Littlefield, 2021.

Sierocka, Halina. "Issues in translating, interpreting and teaching legal languages and legal communication." International Journal for the Semiotics of Law-Revue internationale de Sémiotique juridique 36.4 (2023): 1629-1638.

Volokh, Alexander. "Choosing interpretive methods: A positive theory of judges and everyone else." NYUL Rev. 83 (2008): 769.

Yin, Elijah Tukwariba, and Beamie Moses Seiwoh. "Costs and delays in accessing justice: A comparative analysis of Ghana and Sierra Leone." Advancing civil justice reform and conflict resolution in Africa and Asia: Comparative analyses and case studies. IGI Global, 2021. 112-139.

Yin, Elijah Tukwariba, Francis Korankye-Sakyi, and Peter Atudiwe Atupare. "Prisoners' Access to Justice: Family Support, Prison Legal Education, and Court Proceedings." J. Pol. & L. 14 (2021): 113.

Yin, Elijah Tukwariba. Religion as an organizing principle in Ankaful maximum security prison, Ghana. University of Cape Coast, 2018.

Published

2025-03-01

How to Cite

Yin, E. T. Y., & Atupare, P. A. A. (2025). GHANA’S NEED FOR SOCIOLOGICAL JURISPRUDENCE: A CRITICAL APPLICATION OF ROSCOE POUND’S THEORY. UCC Law Journal, 4(2), 1–26. https://doi.org/10.47963/ucclj.v4i2.1718

Most read articles by the same author(s)