Young persons with disabilities in Ghana are calling for an end to tokenistic inclusion, demanding direct access to decision-making spaces, budget allocations, and funding mechanis
The report indicates that young persons with disabilities in Ghana are calling for an end to tokenistic inclusion, demanding direct access to decision-making spaces, budget allocations, and funding mechanisms that cut out bureaucratic intermediaries.
It further notes that at the launch of the Amplifying Voices project, a 2025 collaborative initiative by FHL Group Africa and Community Desk International (CDI), stakeholders unveiled stark findings.
The gathering agreed that despite years of advocacy, young persons with disabilities remain systematically excluded from governance structures, over-trained but underutilized, and largely invisible in national budget planning.
Speaking through Program Manager Patience Entsie of FHL Group Africa, Founder Naa-Amy Wayne delivered a sharp-edged welcome address.
“The Amplifying Voices project was born out of a clear and urgent recognition: that young persons with disabilities in Ghana have long been treated as a single, homogenous group, when in truth, they are a richly diverse community, each navigating distinct realities shaped by gender, geography, the nature of their disability, and the systems that either support or fail them.”
The research, conducted in Accra using an exploratory qualitative approach grounded in design research principles, identified four critical barriers.
Leadership & Inclusion Gaps – Young persons with disabilities are consistently absent from decision-making structures. Inclusion, researchers argued, must be intentionally designed into institutions, not merely assumed.
Funding & Budget Barriers – Disability inclusion is routinely deprioritised in national budgets. Participants called for sustained advocacy targeting Ghana’s Ministry of Finance to shift priorities.
Overemphasis on Training Without Application – A damaging pattern of “overtraining” emerged: individuals receive repeated skills training but no platforms to apply them, draining programme impact.
Inadequate Infrastructure & Accessibility – Physical venues and public institutions remain inaccessible. Assistive technologies are either underutilised or completely out of reach.
“The findings elevate the voices of young persons with disabilities and reaffirm a simple truth: policies and programmes are more effective when shaped by their lived experiences,” stated the research presenter. “They also provide an opportunity to translate evidence into action and ensure no one is left behind.”
The Amplifying Voices project, launched in 2025, aims to move disability inclusion from tokenistic consultation to built-in, rights-based participation. Strategies emerging from the meeting include embedding inclusion from programme design through to evaluation, leveraging social media to engage young persons with disabilities, and strengthening monitoring systems with clear accountability indicators.
One of the most concrete proposals is a direct funding card system, similar to an ATM card, that would allow transparent, direct disbursement of financial support to beneficiaries, eliminating intermediaries and promoting genuine independence.
Kwasi Manu, Co-Founder of Community Desk International, available for further comment on the research findings, emphasised that evidence must now translate into binding action.