Applying a Legal pluralist framework, this study examines the complex interrelationships between religion, law and Politics in contemporary Ghana, a professedly secular State characterised by high levels of religiosity.
It contends that Religion can function as an impediment to Ghana\'s secularity and also serve as an integral tool f.
It aims to explore legal, cultural and moral tensions created by overlapping loci of authority (State actors, traditional leaders and religious functionaries).
Applying a Legal pluralist framework, this study examines the complex interrelationships between religion, law and Politics in contemporary Ghana, a professedly secular State characterised by high levels of religiosity