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What Ghana Can Learn From U.S’ CROWN Act and Protect School Girls’ Natural Hair

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Ghana has, for many years, been confronting the uncomfortable reality of how its school grooming policies clash with cultural identity.

A weeks ago, the viral video of a crying first-year student at Yaa Asantewaa Girls’ Senior High School, forced to cut her long hair before she could be admitted, ignited a nationwide conversation on autonomy, dignity, and the colonial hangovers embedded in the education system.

As public outrage intensifies, many Ghanaians are pointing to a global model worth studying closely: the CROWN Act, a sweeping U.S. civil rights law now adopted by 28 states, banning hair discrimination in workplaces and schools. While American and Ghanaian contexts differ, the underlying cultural struggle is identical — the policing of Black hair, especially on Black girls, through outdated, Eurocentric standards of “neatness.”

Here’s what Ghana can take away from the CROWN Act movement — and what meaningful reform could look like.

What Ghana Can Learn From the CROWN Act

1. Hair Is Not “Just Hair” — It’s Identity

The CROWN Act legally recognizes that hair texture and protective hairstyles such as locs, braids, twists, and afros are expressions of racial and cultural identity.

Ghana’s short-hair rules for girls — a policy designed during colonial administration — still treat African hair as something to be managed, tamed, or minimized. The U.S. experience shows that when governments acknowledge the cultural and psychological significance of natural hair, discrimination becomes easier to identify and eliminate.

2. Respect for Students Begins With Respect for Their Bodies

The Pennsylvania legislation stresses dignity in personal appearance as a civil right.
Ghana’s approach — forcing girls to shave their heads, sometimes in tears — sends the opposite message: compliance over consent.

The viral YAGSHS incident struck a nerve because many Ghanaians recognized the humiliation in that 30-second clip.

The CROWN Act reminds policymakers that rules meant to “discipline” should never strip children of bodily autonomy.

3. “Neatness” Standards Can Be Modernized Without Sacrificing Discipline

U.S. districts that have adopted CROWN Act protections haven’t descended into chaos. Schools still enforce hygiene and safety policies — they just can’t discriminate against natural hairstyles.

Ghana’s argument that long natural hair compromises “uniformity” or boarding supervision has been challenged by scholars like Emmanuel Antwi and Ginn Bonsu Assibey. Their research shows students can maintain locs, braids, or afros responsibly — if schools teach proper care rather than impose outdated punitive rules.

@pulseghana

A newly admitted student of Yaa Asantewaa Girls’ Senior High School looked visibly emotional after having her hair cut to meet the school’s enrollment rules. What are your thoughts on this tradition? Should it still be enforced? PulseViral

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4. Outlawing Hair Discrimination Protects Mental Health

American advocates pushed the CROWN Act partly because children were being suspended, humiliated, or made to feel unfit for their own classrooms.

The psychological damage visible in the YAGSHS video — the sobbing, the pain — mirrors the emotional toll chronicled by U.S. researchers.

Protective legislation forces institutions to reckon with the long-term harm caused by seemingly “simple” grooming policies.

5. The Law Can Be A Tool for Cultural Restoration

The CROWN Act reframes the conversation: Black hair is not a deviation from norms — it is a norm.

Ghana, a Black African nation, still enforces appearance rules invented during colonial schooling systems. Fixing this is not just policy reform; it is cultural reclamation.

6. Parents and Students Deserve a Say in Grooming Rules

In the U.S., the CROWN Act passed because families, teachers, business leaders, and activists demanded it.

Ghana’s hair rules have persisted largely because students — minors with limited power — bear the consequences while most adults defend tradition. A modern approach would involve listening directly to girls, parents, and natural-hair experts.

7. Change Does Not Have to Be Radical — Just Respectful

The CROWN Act doesn’t force anyone to wear locs or braids. It simply protects the choice.
Ghana could adopt a similar principle:

  • allow natural and Afro-centric hairstyles
  • maintain reasonable hygiene rules
  • remove discriminatory practices
    This would honor Ghanaian identity while keeping school environments orderly.

8. The Law Can Prevent Future Trauma

In the U.S., legislation has become a safety net.

A child cannot be forced to shave her locs. She cannot be suspended for her braids. The YAGSHS incident has shown Ghana what happens without such safeguards.

Creating a legal framework — even if not identical to the CROWN Act — could prevent future abuses of authority.

A Moment for Ghana to Rethink

Ghana has made strides before — the 2021 Achimota school ruling was a breakthrough. But the recurring nature of these controversies suggests the country is still negotiating the boundaries between culture, control, and education.

The viral haircut video of the visibly upset YAGSHS student has become more than a moment of outrage. It is a cultural mirror. And it raises a powerful question:

Why should the descendants of a people who fought for independence still be governed by colonial grooming rules?

The CROWN Act offers a blueprint — not a copy-paste solution, but a framework rooted in dignity, identity, and respect. Ghana has an opportunity to craft its own version, grounded in Afro-centric values and local realities.

The debate is no longer about hair. It is about the freedom to be whole, even in a school uniform.

Commentary

Rising oil prices could trigger unexpected petrol demand in Ghana

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Conventional wisdom dictates that rising prices should lead to falling demand. However, this article challenges that notion by delving into the complex and often counterintuitive relationship between global oil prices and petrol consumption in Ghana. Drawing on recent research analyzing market data from 2016 to 2024, Rafael Adjpong Amankwah reveals that higher crude oil prices do not automatically suppress demand. Instead, factors like consumer hoarding behavior in anticipation of future hikes and the essential nature of petrol for transport and logistics can keep consumption stable or even cause it to spike temporarily.


Rising oil prices could trigger unexpected petrol demand in Ghana

By: Rafael Adjapong Amankwah

Fuel prices may rise again soon, but what if higher prices don’t actually reduce petrol consumption in Ghana?

Discussions about rising global crude oil prices are once again dominating energy market conversations, raising concerns about higher petrol prices and increased transport costs across Ghana.

Yet the relationship between oil prices and petrol consumption may not be as straightforward as many assume. Conventional economic theory suggests that when fuel prices rise, consumers should reduce consumption. However, recent research analyzing Ghana’s petrol market reveals a more complex pattern of behavior.

The study finds that crude oil prices exhibit a positive relationship with petrol consumption, indicating that higher prices do not necessarily suppress demand as standard models predict.

This pattern reflects several structural characteristics of Ghana’s economy.

First, alleged BDC’s stockpiling increases the potential for increased purchases(demand) vis a vis consumption as consumers often engage in anticipatory or hoarding behavior when price increases are expected.

Second, global crude oil price increases do not necessarily reduce petrol consumption in Ghana in the short run. Petrol is an essential input for transport, logistics, and small business operations, meaning substitution possibilities are limited. As a result, consumption may remain stable or even increase due to inventory adjustments and expectations of further price hikes

These findings also carry an important methodological implication that Traditional symmetric demand models, which assume that price increases and decreases produce equal but opposite responses in consumption, appear to misrepresent the dynamics of Ghana’s petrol market.

When asymmetric price behavior such as the Rock-and-Feathers effect interacts with structural demand constraints, consumption responses become more complex than standard theory predicts.

Using monthly national data from 2016 to 2024 and applying a nonlinear econometric approach, the study examined how crude oil prices, exchange rates, inflation, and domestic fuel taxes affect petrol consumption.

The findings show that petrol consumption in Ghana responds asymmetrically to price changes. In practical terms, this means that price increases and price decreases do not affect consumption in the same way.

The research also highlights the importance of exchange rate movements. Because Ghana imports most of its refined petroleum products, a depreciation of the cedi significantly increases the local cost of fuel and tends to reduce consumption.

Perhaps the most influential factor identified in the study is domestic fuel taxation. Changes in taxes, levies and margins have a stronger effect on petrol consumption than movements in global crude oil prices. In particular, reductions in fuel taxes tend to stimulate consumption much more strongly than tax increases suppress it.

These findings suggest that policymakers seeking to manage fuel demand, inflation, and fiscal stability should pay close attention to domestic fuel pricing structures rather than focusing solely on international oil price movements.

As global oil markets face renewed volatility, understanding how Ghanaian consumers and businesses respond to fuel price changes will become increasingly important for economic planning and energy policy

Understanding the behavioral responses behind fuel consumption is critical for managing energy affordability, fiscal stability, and economic resilience.

The next time fuel prices rise in Ghana, the assumption that “higher prices reduce consumption” may need to be reconsidered.

In reality, the dynamics of petrol demand are shaped by behavioral responses, policy decisions, and exchange rate pressures, not just global crude oil prices. Understanding these asymmetries could be the difference between reacting to fuel price shocks and actually managing them.


Rafael Amankwah is a professional in Ghana’s downstream energy sector with a background in energy economics and investment strategy. He is passionate about advancing sustainable energy solutions and applies research, behavioral insights, and innovation to support smarter energy policies and business models. 

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Commentary

Ghana Must Choose Diplomacy Over Alignment in the Israel–Iran Crisis: Lessons from Ghana’s Peacekeeping and Non-Aligned Legacy

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In an open letter to Israel’s ambassador, author Seth K. Awuku argues that Ghana must resist pressure to take sides in the escalating Israel-Iran conflict. Drawing on the recent wounding of Ghanaian peacekeepers in Lebanon and the nation’s non-aligned legacy, he calls for a return to diplomacy, restraint, and the protection of national interest over strategic alignment. Read the full commentary below.


Ghana Must Choose Diplomacy Over Alignment in the Israel–Iran Crisis: Lessons from Ghana’s Peacekeeping and Non-Aligned Legacy

By: Seth K. Awuku

Your Excellency Ambassador Roey Gilad,
I extend sincere diplomatic courtesy and appreciation for your prompt humanitarian response following the missile strike that wounded Ghanaian peacekeepers in southern Lebanon.

In times of shared sorrow, words carry profound weight. Your description of the attack as “tragic” and “catastrophic,” along with your wishes for the swift recovery of the injured soldiers, reflects genuine compassion. Ghana receives such gestures with gratitude, for they affirm our shared humanity amid the smoke of conflict.

Yet only two days earlier, on March 5, during a public briefing in Accra, you urged Ghana to “join its voice” in confronting Iran and to support a strategic change in its leadership to end threats and instability.

That appeal, understandable from Israel’s perspective, now stands in painful contrast to the fresh wounds suffered by Ghanaian soldiers serving under the United Nations. Tragedy, once named, requires more than sympathy—it demands reflection.

The attack of March 6 tore through the Ghanaian battalion headquarters in southern Lebanon, leaving two soldiers critically injured and another traumatized. Ghanaian peacekeepers have served in Lebanon for decades, often under dangerous and unpredictable conditions.

These events revive older concerns about the security of our personnel abroad and the broader risks that accompany escalating regional conflict.

They also follow a troubling incident in December 2025 at Ben Gurion International Airport, where several Ghanaians including members of an official delegation were detained for hours and subjected to questioning and searches that Ghana later described as humiliating and degrading. Such incidents, when repeated, inevitably strain trust.

Reciprocity, transparent investigation, accountability, and credible assurances against recurrence are essential to rebuilding confidence.

Your Excellency, during the Israel–Hamas War in November 2023, I addressed an open letter to your predecessor, Shlomit Sufa, cautioning that if the conflict escalated unchecked, it “may not be like other wars; it may be apocalyptic in scope and possibly destructive of our globe.” That warning was offered not in division, but in concern for the safety and future of all peoples caught in the widening arc of war.

Recent missile exchanges between Israel and Iran demonstrate the growing lethality of modern warfare and the alarming vulnerability of civilian populations – even in countries equipped with advanced defense systems. Ghana, however, does not possess such protections.

Our security priorities focus primarily on internal stability and peacekeeping obligations. We do not have missile interception systems, sophisticated air defenses, or the strategic infrastructure necessary to withstand retaliatory strikes in a wider regional confrontation. Alignment in conflicts of this magnitude, without equivalent protection, exposes vulnerabilities that Ghana cannot afford. Our ports, markets, infrastructure, and communities would all be at risk should tensions expand beyond the Middle East.

Precisely because great powers often allow strategic rivalries to overshadow the urgency of peace, middle powers like Ghana carry a different kind of responsibility. Our diplomatic tradition, shaped by the non-aligned vision of Kwame Nkrumah, strengthened through decades of peacekeeping, and inspired by the global statesmanship of Kofi Annan, places upon us a quiet but meaningful moral authority.

We can call for restraint without appearing weak, advocate dialogue without conceding defeat, and remind the world that wisdom in diplomacy is often measured not by the volume of power, but by the courage to prevent catastrophe.

The Hebrew Scriptures offer a powerful reminder of the difference between victory and legacy. In 1 Chronicles, King David is told he cannot build the temple because he has shed too much blood. Instead, that task falls to his son Solomon, whose name signifies peace and rest. True greatness, the text suggests, lies not only in the victories of war but in the achievements of peace.

History also remembers another figure: Samson, the blinded warrior who in despair pulled down the pillars of the temple, destroying himself and his enemies alike. If modern conflicts are pushed toward such desperation; if nuclear doctrines or catastrophic retaliation ever become reality, the consequences would extend far beyond the borders of any single nation. Ghana therefore pleads for wisdom over pride and restraint over escalation.

In moments such as this, the measure of leadership is not found in the power to escalate conflict, but in the wisdom to pause, reflect, and choose the harder path of peace.

May the calm voice of diplomacy silence the roar of war.

May the wounded recover before new wounds are inflicted.

May the pain of mistrust fade like morning mist across the savanna.

And may history remember not the clash of weapons, but the courage of those who chose dialogue over destruction.

With respect for your office, hope for the recovery of the injured, and a shared aversion to catastrophe,

I remain,
By Seth K. Awuku
Principal, Sovereign Advisory
Former Immigration and Refugee Lawyer (Ottawa, Canada)
Writer on international law, diplomacy, and refugee governance

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Influencer Shanell R. Oliver Delivers Powerful Message to All Blacks: “We Are One African People Living in Different Places”

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Accra, Ghana – March 6, 2026 – U.S.-based influencer Shanell R. Oliver (@shanellroliver) shared a viral Facebook video reminding the global African diaspora of their shared West and Central African roots, urging unity across borders and continents.

In the emotional post, Oliver reminds Blacks across the world that more than 12.5 million Africans were forcibly trafficked during the transatlantic slave trade, with over 90% originating from the same core regions: the Congo Kingdom, Akan States (including modern Ghana), Yoruba and Dahomey lands (Nigeria and Benin), Igbo heartlands, and Senegambia. This common ancestry links African Americans, Afro-Brazilians, Haitians, Jamaicans, Trinidadians, Cubans, Dominicans, and Afro-descendant communities in Colombia, Venezuela, and beyond.

“Our spiritual systems, drum patterns, foods, dances, languages, and resistance movements all mirror each other because we come from one cultural foundation,” Oliver says in the video. “European invaders scattered us, but they couldn’t scatter our identity.”

She points to DNA evidence showing that 70% of African Americans trace roots to Nigeria, Ghana, Benin, Cameroon, Congo, and Angola—the same zones that shaped Afro-Brazilian and Caribbean cultures.

The message resonates deeply on Independence Day, when Ghanaians and the diaspora celebrate shared heritage and resilience.

Oliver closes with a call to recognition: “We’re not different kinds of Black. We are one African people living in different places. And we are finally remembering that.”

The post has sparked widespread shares and comments across the diaspora, reinforcing the enduring connection between continental Africans and their kin worldwide.

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