The National Commission for Civic Education (NCCE) is a government agency in Ghana. It is the commission responsible for the education of Ghanaians on civic matters. The commission was established by Act 452 of the Parliament of Ghana in 1993.
The commission is run by a seven-member committee headed by the commission's chairman, two deputies and four members. The committee's membership is through appointment by the President of Ghana upon the advice of the Council of State.
Any one of the members of the commission must by law be a Ghanaian who possesses all the characteristics that qualifies one to be elected as a Member of Parliament and must also be a non executive in any political party.
The members of the National Commission for Civic Education have varying rights depending on their status. The Chairman of the Commission is ranked on the same level with same terms and condition of service as a Justice of the Court of Appeal. The first Deputy Chairman of the Commission has the same rank of terms and condition of service as a Justice of the Court of Appeal with the second Deputy Chairman of the Commission having the same terms and conditions of service as a Justice of the High Court. The other four members of the commission have their privileges and terms and conditions of their service approved by the Parliament of Ghana.
Per the Constitution of Ghana, the commission is mandated to perform five functions:
The work of the NCCE comes to the fore during election years in Ghana when thorough public education is done to sensitize electorates about the voting procedure and their conducts before, during and after presidential and public elections. Prior to the 2012 Ghanaian general elections the commission educated all the electorates on the new biometric voting system that was going to be used.
The commission collaborates with other bodies to ensure a greater reach of its functions. One of such bodies is the Ghana Institute of Linguistics, Literacy and Bible Translation GILLBT, with which to translate an abridged version of the 1992 Constitution of Ghana into 30 Ghanaian languages. It also partnered with the International Federation of Women Lawyers to translate the "Rights of Ghanaian Women" into minority languages.