Abstract:
This study examined the roles of indigenous actors and the complementary 
efforts made by Government and Civil Society Organizations to resolve the 
deadlock between the Gonja and Nawuri ethnic groups in the Kpandai district 
of Ghana. Classical conflict theories such as primordial, constructionist and 
instrumentalist were employed to underpin the causes of the conflict. In-depth 
interviews and focus group discussions were employed to obtain data from the 
respondents, while purposive sampling technique was used to select 96 
respondents who had in-depth knowledge of the conflict. The analysis revealed 
that the government of Ghana employed multiple strategies such as deployment 
of security personnel, setting up of committees – the Justice Ampiah 
Committee, and the Permanent Peace Negotiation Team to manage and resolve 
the conflict but to no avail. Civil Society Organisations (CSOs) such as the 
Nairobi Peace Initiative only succeeded in opening communication between 
the conflict parties in Kumasi but could not also resolve the conflict. The study 
also revealed that interveners sidelined indigenous conflict resolution 
mechanisms and local authorities such as the chiefs, religious leaders, the 
gerontocratic approach and Tengdana- all embedded in the local culture of 
resolving conflict. The study further discovered that endogenisation of conflict 
resolution, where both indigenous knowledge and interveners‟ roles are 
combined is best fit to resolve inter-ethnic conflicts. It is recommended, among 
others, that the government, CSOs, and local actors should complement the 
roles of each other to find a lasting solution to the conflict.