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Mahama signs Legal Education Reform Bill

President John Dramani Mahama has signed the Legal Education Reform Bill, 2025 into law, marking a historic turning point in Ghana’s legal education system and bringing an end to the Ghana School of Law’s 66-year monopoly on professional legal training in the country.

The landmark legislation is expected to expand access to professional legal education by allowing accredited universities and institutions to offer professional law courses, a responsibility that had for decades been reserved exclusively for the Ghana School of Law.

For years, concerns had been raised about the restrictive nature of professional legal education in Ghana, particularly the bottlenecks associated with admissions into the Ghana School of Law.

Thousands of qualified LLB graduates across the country were often unable to continue their legal training due to limited spaces and the highly competitive entrance examination system.

Speaking after the assent on Monday, May 11, the president stated that the “law is to regulate legal education and ensure the highest standards in terms of legal education, but also to open up the space for more opportunity for legal education in Ghana. This particular act has been one that many aspiring lawyers have been looking up to.”

Under the previous system, the Ghana School of Law remained the sole institution mandated to provide the Professional Law Course required for students to qualify as lawyers and be called to the Bar in Ghana.

The institution’s monopoly dated back more than six decades and had repeatedly become the subject of national debate, with students, civil society organisations and legal practitioners calling for reforms to make legal education more accessible.

The passage and signing of the Legal Education Reform Bill, 2025 is therefore being viewed as a major breakthrough in addressing those long-standing concerns.

With the new law now in force, accredited universities that meet the required standards and receive approval from the relevant regulatory bodies will be permitted to run professional legal education programmes.

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