Mensah Adinkrah

Mensah Adinkrah, Ph.D., holds advanced academic degrees in sociology and has received extensive training in military sociology, victimology, criminology, penology, thanatology, and suicidology. His current research interests centre on comparative criminology and criminal justice, as well as suicide, homicide, and witchcraft accusations and persecution in Africa. He was born and raised in Ghana and is fluent in Twi.

Causes of Rural–Urban Migration in Ghana and Other African Countries

The causes of Rural–Urban Migration are major concerns of African governments like Ghana. Across Ghana and much of Africa, a defining social transformation of the 21st century is the movement of people from the countryside to towns and cities. Every year, thousands of young people leave rural communities—villages and small towns—and migrate to urban centers…

Read More

Posthumous Treatment of Accused Witches in Ghana

In many Ghanaian communities, accusations of witchcraft generate intense moral outrage and social hostility. Persons believed to be malevolent witches are frequently subjected to verbal abuse, physical assault, forced displacement, and, in extreme cases, extrajudicial killing (Adinkrah, 2004, 2015). Crucially, however, the sanctioning of alleged witches does not necessarily terminate at biological death. Rather, death…

Read More

African Witchcraft Versus European and American Witchcraft

African witchcraft versus European witchcraft have been the focus of local discussions about witchcraft in Ghana for many years. During the period of European colonization, westernization, and the early stages of modernization, people in the Gold Coast (now Ghana) struggled to explain the wide gap in development between Africans and Europeans. Many ordinary people asked…

Read More

Selecting a Marital Partner: What People Look for and How Sociologists Explain It

For many people, choosing a marital partner is a deliberate decision. Individuals often consider several factors before deciding who to marry. Sociologists study these choices and use specific terms to describe the different patterns people follow when selecting a spouse. Marrying Up and Marrying Down Some people seek to “marry up,” meaning they look for…

Read More

How Your Ascribed Status Affects Your Progress in Life

In every society, people occupy different positions called statuses. A status is simply the position a person holds in society. Throughout life, one person can have many statuses at the same time—for example, being a child, a parent, a worker, a student, or a citizen. Sociologists talk about two main types of status: ascribed status…

Read More

Why Relationships and Marriages Break Down in Ghana

Marital and relationship breakdowns occur for many reasons, and these reasons often vary from one society to another. People enter intimate relationships with specific expectations—emotional, economic, sexual, social, and cultural. When these expectations remain unmet, tensions arise, and relationships may eventually rupture. For this article, I surveyed 28 Ghanaian adults—14 men and 14 women—to better…

Read More

Causes of Juvenile Delinquency in Ghana

Children are the future of every society. Yet Ghana faces a serious challenge if urgent steps are not taken to ensure that today’s children are properly guided and nurtured to grow into law-abiding and responsible citizens. In recent years, there has been a noticeable increase in juvenile delinquency across the country. Many children are skipping…

Read More

Where Is the Justice in “Mob Justice,” “Vigilante Justice,” and “Instant Justice”?

Some call it mob justice. Others describe it as instant justice or vigilante justice. But where, indeed, is the justice when a person is beaten, maimed, or killed without a proper trial or lawful conviction by the legally constituted justice system of the land? Every year in Ghana, scores of individuals are seized by members…

Read More

Inscriptions on Ghanaian Commercial Vehicles

A visitor to Ghana will quickly notice something striking on the roads: commercial motor vehicles speak. Tro-tros, buses, taxis, and long-distance vehicles often carry inscriptions—short messages painted boldly on the body of the vehicle. These inscriptions may appear on the back of the vehicle, across the windscreen, or on a signboard fixed to the front….

Read More

Witchcraft Beliefs in Ghana: Culture, Fear, and the Cost to Human Lives

Witchcraft is commonly understood in Ghana as a supernatural power believed to be possessed by some individuals, enabling them to influence the behavior, health, fortune, or misfortune of others—either as victims or beneficiaries. Belief in witchcraft and witches remains widespread and deeply embedded in Ghanaian society. Although no comprehensive national survey exists to measure belief…

Read More

The Importance of Newspapers in Ghana

Newspapers occupy an important place in Ghanaian society. Long before the rise of social media and online news platforms, newspapers were the primary source of information for the public. Even today, despite digital competition, newspapers continue to serve critical social, political, educational, and cultural functions across the country. Source of News and Information At their…

Read More

A New Religion in Ghana: Asomdwee Ntonton Som

A new religious movement has emerged in Ghana known as Asomdwee Ntonton Som, a name that translates literally as “Peace and Exaltation Religion.” Ghana is a deeply multireligious society, long accustomed to religious plurality. Christianity—represented by historic denominations such as Catholic, Presbyterian, Methodist, Anglican, and Salvation Army, as well as numerous Pentecostal and Charismatic movements—dominates…

Read More