Mahama Signs Legal Education Reform Bill Into Law — 60-Year Ghana School Of Law Monopoly Ends

President John Dramani Mahama signed the Legal Education Reform Bill 2025 into law on 11 May 2026, ending the Ghana School of Law’s six-decade monopoly over professional legal training. The new Act permits accredited universities and institutions to offer professional law courses, dramatically expanding access for aspiring lawyers.

What The Law Changes

  • Monopoly ended: Ghana School of Law no longer the sole provider of professional legal training
  • Authorised: Accredited universities + institutions can now offer professional law courses
  • Duration of prior monopoly: Over 60 years
  • Access: Designed to expand professional-law pathways across the country

Mahama’s Framing

  • Reform aims at “improving legal education while creating more opportunities for aspiring lawyers”
  • Position: end the historical bottleneck that has restricted bar entry
  • Government framing this as part of a broader access-to-justice agenda

The Context

  • For decades, thousands of LLB graduates have failed to advance due to capped Ghana School of Law admissions
  • Annual bar-entry exam fail rates have repeatedly drawn public scrutiny
  • Civil-society and legal-education advocates have campaigned for liberalisation for years
  • Bill signed under Mahama’s broader 2026 reform agenda

Why It Matters

  • Long-blocked LLB graduates now have multiple professional pathways
  • Universities can scale legal education capacity to meet demand
  • Sets a precedent for further professional-training liberalisation
  • Expected to grow Ghana’s lawyer pool over the medium term

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