Reinstating the Inherent Dignity of Marginalized Communities in Ghana

Authors

  • Anabella Afra Boateng Soka University of America, USA

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.32674/jise.v9iS(1).2010

Keywords:

Democracy, Sexual Minorities, Ghana, Soka Education, Social Justice, Gender

Abstract

When a representative democracy implicitly or explicitly undermines minority rights and prevents marginalized people from actively participating in a democratic process, it facilitates social exclusion. This paper focuses on how Ghana’s democracy, coupled with traditions, aggravate social exclusion. The research discusses the democratization process of Ghana and its role in the marginalization of minorities. Particularly, this paper looks at the class-based marginalization of women on the one hand and the sex-based marginalization of the LGBTQI+ community on the other, in Ghana. Finally, this paper explores how Soka Education, as a way of life, can support these marginalized communities in Ghana.

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Author Biography

  • Anabella Afra Boateng, Soka University of America, USA

    ANABELLA AFRA BOATENG, is a master’s student in the Educational Leadership and Societal Change program at the Soka University of America. Her major research interests lie in the area of Critical Theory in Education, African Feminist Epistemologies, and African immigrants in higher education.  Email: a.afraboateng@gmail.com

Additional Files

Published

2020-08-11

Issue

Section

Soka Approaches in Education (Published)

How to Cite

Reinstating the Inherent Dignity of Marginalized Communities in Ghana. (2020). Journal of Interdisciplinary Studies in Education, 9(SI), 80-101. https://doi.org/10.32674/jise.v9iS(1).2010