| dc.description.abstract | ABSTRACT
The democratic dispensation of Ghana is fraught with spates of violent acts 
perpetrated by political vigilante groups which pose threats to human security of 
residents. Consequently, this study uses a qualitative approach to explore political 
vigilantism and its effects on human security in the Kumasi metropolis of Ghana. The 
purposive sampling procedure was used in selecting key informants from three sub areas in the metropolis, representatives of the police, District Assembly, the National 
Commission for Civic Education (NCCE), media and political party executives from 
the New Patriotic Party (NPP) and the National Democratic Congress (NDC). The 
snowball sampling approach was further used in selecting ten political vigilantes 
while 54 residents were similarly sampled using convenience sampling. The study 
revealed that the quest for jobs and income mainly motivate people to join political 
vigilante groups. It was also identified that the political vigilante groups are 
strategically sophisticated. These sophisticated strategies thus has ramifications on the 
human security of individuals by way of: causing fear and want, deaths, chronic 
health problems, physical environmental crises, poverty, disrupting economic 
activities and the sources of income for people, widening inequality, disenfranchising 
people and disturbing the broader society. The study recommended that Government 
should make sustainable jobs and livelihood empowerment programmes available for 
the alarming youthful population. It also recommended that political parties should 
have the political will to disband such groups and ensure they do not interfere in the 
discharge of the duties of the national security apparatus when individuals engaged in
political vigilante offences and other crimes of similitude are caught. | en_US |