Community Solutions to Civic Space Shrinking | RFLD
Community Solutions

COMMUNITY SOLUTIONS TO
CIVIC SPACE SHRINKING.

By Fathiyat Numbo Mohammed

For RFLD Ghana

Exploring grassroots resistance and local democratic protection in the West African sub-region.

RFLD Strategic Meeting in Ghana

Across West Africa and beyond, many people are feeling it; civic space is shrinking. Community voices are being ignored. Civil society organisations are facing heavier regulations. Public criticism is sometimes labelled as troublemaking. Peaceful protest is often treated with suspicion. In some countries, new laws make it harder for citizens to organize, receive funding, or speak openly.

Ghana is widely recognised for its democratic stability, and we are often called one of the most stable democracies in the region. Yet even here, especially in underserved communities, civic space is not as open or as protected as it should be. When young people fear speaking out, when community groups struggle to register or operate, when citizens are excluded from local decision-making, democracy quietly weakens.

RFLD Community Engagement session
Participants at RFLD Workshop
"From where I stand as a grassroots leader working in the Upper West Region, the shrinking of civic space does not always come with sirens. Sometimes it comes softly through silence, discouragement, and the normalisation of exclusion."

But communities are not powerless. Across northern Ghana, people are developing local solutions to protect civic freedoms, defend civil society space, and resist repressive practices; not with violence, but with creativity, organisation, and courage. One of the strongest tools we have seen is civic education at the grassroots level. In many rural communities, people are not fully aware of their constitutional rights, the role of local government, or the lawful ways to demand accountability. This gap creates fear and makes repression easier.

Harnessing Regional Legal Frameworks

The protection of civic space is not merely a local ambition but is deeply rooted in regional and continental legal instruments that many grassroots actors are now beginning to leverage. Instruments such as the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights (ACHPR) and the ECOWAS Protocol on Democracy and Good Governance provide a robust legal shield for civil society. By translating these complex international documents into local dialects and integrating them into community dialogues, we empower local leaders to speak the language of "rights" rather than "requests." This shifts the power dynamic between citizens and local authorities, as community groups can point to specific legal obligations that states have committed to upholding. Furthermore, the engagement with the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights has allowed local violations to be reported to higher oversight bodies, ensuring that even if domestic legal avenues are restricted, there remains a continental stage for seeking justice and visibility.

Regional Training Discussion Panel

The Gendered Dimension: Protecting WHRDs

A critical, often overlooked aspect of the shrinking civic space is its disproportionate impact on Women Human Rights Defenders (WHRDs). In many West African societies, when a woman speaks up against injustice, she faces a double layer of repression: the state’s political crackdowns and the community's patriarchal backlash. WHRDs often encounter gender-specific threats, including online harassment, social stigmatization, and physical violence aimed at silencing their influence. RFLD recognizes that a truly open civic space must be inclusive and safe for women. Our strategy focuses on building protection networks that provide both psychological support and physical security for women activists. By creating "safe houses" and legal defense funds specifically tailored for women, we ensure that the frontlines of our democracy remain diverse. Strengthening women's leadership within civic movements is not just a matter of equity; it is a tactical necessity, as movements led by women have historically proven more resilient and more focused on sustainable community transformation.

A Roadmap for Sustainable Civic Engagement

Looking toward 2028, the sustainability of civic space depends on our ability to move beyond reactive advocacy toward proactive institutional building. This involves creating "community-led monitoring systems" that function as permanent watchdogs for human rights at the district level. These systems rely on trained youth volunteers who utilize mobile technology to document early signs of administrative overreach or civic restrictions. However, technology alone is insufficient; it must be paired with financial resilience. The heavy reliance on external donor funding often leaves local NGOs vulnerable to state-imposed financial restrictions. Therefore, RFLD is pioneering models of community-based resource mobilization, encouraging local philanthropy and social entrepreneurship to fund civic education. By rooting our financial and operational structures within the communities we serve, we build a movement that cannot be easily dismantled by changing political winds or international funding shifts. The ultimate goal is a self-sustaining ecosystem of active citizenship where democratic participation is woven into the very fabric of daily communal life.

RFLD's 2023-2028 Strategic Pillars

Pillar 1

Civic Space & Democracy

Addressing threats to freedom of expression, assembly, and association for activists and organizations.

Pillar 2

Participatory Governance & Media

Strengthening capacity to engage state institutions and developing independent media landscapes.

Pillar 3

Rights & Representation

Ensuring women's participation in decision-making from local councils to national parliaments.

Pillar 4

Human Rights Protection

Providing emergency assistance, legal aid, and secure shelter for Women Human Rights Defenders.

Pillar 5

Economic Power & Climate Justice

Supporting economic independence and addressing climate-induced displacement and its impact on participation.

Pillar 6

Peace & Security

Operationalizing the Women, Peace, and Security agenda through mediation and support for survivors.

Pillar 7

Health & Bodily Autonomy

Recognizing reproductive rights as civic rights, ensuring women control their own body and health decisions.

Conclusion

Shrinking civic space cannot be reversed by policy statements alone. It requires listening to communities, funding grassroots initiatives, protecting local organisers, and recognising that democracy survives or collapses at the community level. From the Upper West Region, the message is clear: communities are not waiting to be rescued. They are already building solutions. What they need is recognition, protection, and a seat in the conversations that shape their future.

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