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Akufo-Addo to Serve as Special Guest of Honour at Launch of Echoes from the Doyen

Former President Nana Addo Dankwa Akufo-Addo will serve as Special Guest of Honour at the launch of Echoes from the Doyen: J. B. Danquah to Ghana and Africa, a new scholarly work by Barima Piesie Okyere-Darko. The event is scheduled to take place on Wednesday, 4 March 2026, at the British Council in Accra.

The forthcoming launch brings renewed national attention to the intellectual legacy of Dr. Joseph Boakye Danquah, one of the most influential figures in the constitutional and political development of the Gold Coast and later Ghana. While Danquah’s role in the independence struggle and the formation of early political movements has long been documented, Okyere-Darko’s book seeks to move beyond familiar historical accounts and instead interrogate the architecture of Danquah’s thought.

Echoes from the Doyen presents Danquah as a constitutional thinker whose influence extended beyond political activism into the realm of political philosophy. Drawing on letters, speeches, and constitutional memoranda, the author reconstructs Danquah’s vision of governance as one anchored in institutional restraint, democratic accountability, and moral responsibility. The work explores his advocacy for periodic elections, his defence of the rule of law, and his belief in a property-owning democracy grounded in indigenous intellectual traditions.

Central to the book is the articulation of what the author describes as “Ghanaism” — a framework that integrates African theism, patriotism, human dignity, individual liberty, and constitutional discipline. Through this lens, Danquah emerges not simply as a participant in political contestation but as a theorist attempting to define the moral and institutional foundations of a modern African state.

Akufo-Addo’s participation as Special Guest of Honour carries layered significance. Beyond his national leadership experience, he maintains a direct historical connection to the subject of the book as the grand nephew of Dr. Danquah. He also authored the Foreword to Echoes from the Doyen, in which he reflects on the continuing relevance of Danquah’s ideas and underscores the enduring importance of constitutional democracy grounded in the rule of law.

The event will be chaired by Okatakyie Boakye Danquah Ababio, Twafohene of Akyem Abuakwa and customary successor to Dr. Danquah on the same stool he once occupied. His presence reinforces the historical continuity that frames the evening’s intellectual engagement.

Hon. Alexander Afenyo-Markin, Minority Leader of Parliament, is also expected to address the gathering, further elevating the institutional weight of the occasion.

For Okyere-Darko, the book represents an effort to reintroduce Danquah to contemporary audiences as a serious political thinker whose ideas warrant renewed examination. Rather than positioning him within partisan narratives, the work engages his arguments about executive power, institutional balance, and civic responsibility in a manner intended to stimulate reflection within Ghana and across Africa.

As the country prepares for the launch, the event promises to serve as more than a ceremonial gathering. It will offer a structured platform for reconsidering foundational questions about nationhood, constitutional order, and the intellectual traditions that shaped Ghana’s political evolution.

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