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Political transitions and commissions of inquiry: the politicisation of accountability in Ghana
Authors:George M Bob-Milliar  Ali Yakubu Nyaaba
Institution:1. Department of History &2. Political Studies, Kwame Nkrumah University of Science &3. Technology, Kumasi, Ghana gbobmilliar.cass@knust.edu.ghORCID Iconhttps://orcid.org/0000-0001-7374-1369;5. Technology, Kumasi, Ghana
Abstract:Abstract

What role does a commission of inquiry (COI) play in delivering accountability? In theory, when the public delegates power to political leaders to formulate and implement policies, they seek political accountability in return. Using Ghana as a case study, this study examines how the operations of COIs may deliver accountability. Principal–agent theories of accountability and African conceptions of legitimacy are incomplete on their own and need to be integrated into an explanation of political accountability that takes into consideration political transitions and the role of COIs in delivering a minimalist form of accountability. This study argues that a COI is an instrument of regime legitimatisation. The demands by citizens for political accountability in Ghana correlate with political transitions. Accompanying each power alternation was a different model of political accountability. To understand the predominant applications of accountability, we emphasise the politicisation of accountability.
Keywords:commission of inquiry  political accountability  principal–agent theories  African conceptions of legitimacy  legitimatisation of power  two-party politics
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