Law School Expands Partnership to Promote Peaceful Conflict Resolution in West Africa

October 11, 2012

This August, faculty, alumni and students from St. John’s School of Law and Fordham Law joined together for the second year in a row to offer mediation training in Sunyani, Ghana. Hosted by the Catholic University College of Ghana and supported by the Giving to Ghana Foundation, the 40-hour training provided a rich and contextualized immersion in mediation for 55 trainees from around Ghana, including chiefs, lawyers, clergy, educators, administrators, and professional mediators. The training was led by Professors Elayne E. Greenberg, Paul F. Kirgis, and Janai S. Nelson from St. John’s and Jackie Nolan-Haley from Fordham, working with Ghanaian Professors Nene Amegatcher and Michael Owusu. The training qualifies the participants to serve as court-connected mediators under Ghana’s new ADR Act.

Professors Nolan-Haley and Greenberg co-developed the training based on Ghanaian dispute resolution values and authentic Ghanaian conflict simulations. St. John’s law alumni Samantha Horn ‘11, NK Udogwu ’12 and Ravin Shah ’12, all of whom received mediation training at St. John’s, served as coaches for the simulations.

“Ghana is an ideal country for a conflict resolution initiative like this,” said Professor Paul Kirgis, noting that Ghana was the first sub-Saharan African country to gain independence and has perhaps Africa’s best record of peaceful democratic government. “Ghanaians are justifiably proud of their history of peaceful conflict resolution. They can teach us at least as much as we can teach them.”

Echoing those thoughts, Professor Greenberg said: “Ghana has a long standing history of using customary dispute resolution that continues to be administered by the different tribal chiefs,” she said. “Now Ghana’s customary dispute resolution system is evolving and becoming a more formal part of the legal system. How humbling to have the opportunity to work with people who embrace dispute resolution as an essential cultural value.”

This year, the partners undertook two new projects to supplement the mediation training. First, two justices from the New York Supreme Court’s Appellate Division led workshops on judicial opinion writing for Ghanaian judges. Hon. Daniel D. Angiolillo ‘77, a St. John’s School of Law alumnus, and Hon. Mark C. Dillon, a Fordham Law alumnus, conducted seminars for judges in Sunyani and in Kumasi

Moving beyond formal dispute resolution, this year’s program also featured a new initiative to promote economic development throughout the region. St. John’s Law alumnus David Grossman ’11 met with officials of the Brong Ahafo Catholic Cooperative for Social Development to find ways to offer expanded micro-lending in the Brong Ahafo region of Ghana and beyond. An initial $10,000 commitment from the Giving to Ghana Foundation will seed the program. Plans are in place to send St. John’s law students to Ghana in coming years to work with business owners, entrepreneurs, and farmers to enhance their negotiation and business planning skills.