In a powerfully introspective essay from his newly launched “Coup of the Mindset” series, legal practitioner and activist Osagyefo Oliver Mawuse Barker-Vormawor has offered a searing redefinition of bribery.
He stripped away the legalistic lenses often used to view it and instead framing it as both a symptom of state failure and a desperate form of survival.
This is not a sermon on civic morality, but a provocative, layered meditation that challenges the foundations of public accountability, institutional design, and the language of anti-corruption.
“In the clinical language of governance, a bribe is a crime. In the lived experience of the working poor, it is a negotiation, a plea, a way through a door bolted shut by systems that have long forgotten their duty to open. We call it corruption, but often, it is desperation that wears the face of guilt.”
Osagyefo Oliver Mawuse Barker-Vormawor, Legal Practitioner and Activist
The discourse to him is not rooted in the usual headlines or breaking news; rather, it is rooted in an unflinching desire to interrogate the everyday injustices that persist, unacknowledged, at the heart of post-colonial governance systems.

In Ghana, India, Brazil and across the bureaucratic wastelands of former colonies, bribes have become, he argues, not exceptions, but systemic norms.
They are not paid for advantage but for mere access. They are survival tolls charged at the gates of institutions long hollowed out by ineffectiveness and opacity.
According to Barker-Vormawor, the true crime, then, is not just the exchange of illicit funds, but the very existence of state systems so dysfunctional that such exchanges become necessary.
Culture of Bribery
Barker-Vormawor is particularly scathing in his critique of how the culture of bribery is treated in popular discourse.
While public attention focuses on the shame of the bribe-giver, rarely does it question the architecture of injustice that leaves people with no alternative but to pay.
“We are told to be ashamed when we give in and pay, as though to survive a broken system is a more grievous sin than breaking it. But shame is a poor tool of political critique.”
Osagyefo Oliver Mawuse Barker-Vormawor, Legal Practitioner and Activist
For him, bribes are more than moral failures; they are material evidence of structural violence as they expose the hidden tributaries of power where accountability has drowned and where transparency is strangled by bureaucratic red tape.

In vivid language, he likened them to receipts—each one a testament to the quiet brutality of institutions that demand “tribute” rather than deliver service.
Yet, his message is not one of resignation. Rather, Barker-Vormawor repositioned bribery as a paradoxical form of agency—a sign of life, of resistance, even if it is a coerced one.
To pay a bribe, he noted, is to refuse death by paperwork, delay, and disdain. But it is a kind of agency that no citizen should have to resort to.
It is not empowerment, but a protest in disguise. It is both a defiance and a surrender, and therein lies the tension he seeks to unravel.
Institutional Rebellion
At the core of his call is the demand for what he termed “institutional rebellion” and not more donor-sponsored anti-corruption jingles that end at school posters, not patriotic appeals from elites whose own lives are walled off from consequence, but a grassroots reengineering of the way institutions function.
Access, Barker-Vormawor insisted, must be reimagined around the dignity of the person, not the convenience of the elite.
He envisioned a state where digitisation eliminates gatekeeping rather than automating it; where bureaucracy serves the public rather than bleeds it.
His most searing rebuke is reserved for what he calls “bureaucratic sadism repackaged as policy.”
It is a direct swipe at the policymakers, technocrats, and profiteers who design unnecessarily complex systems precisely to create avenues for extortion.
These are the true villains in his essay—those who budget for “leakages” yet criminalise the poor for “leaking,” those who embed corruption in policy while preaching ethics in public.

What emerges from Barker-Vormawor’s treatise is a reorientation of public anger. It is not the poor who must bear the weight of moral outrage, he argued, but the designers of a system that institutionalises bribery as a condition for citizenship.
To dismantle this, he demanded the removal of the system, not just the symptom. “Let their systems be dismantled,” he wrote with conviction. “Let us no longer tolerate bureaucratic sadism repackaged as policy.”
The final call is an appeal for collective refusal. He urged citizens not to stop paying bribes because they are saints, but because they are many.
“There comes a time when to bribe is not to breathe—but to kneel,” he wrote. “And we have knelt long enough.” In that declaration lies the manifesto of the “Coup of the Mindset”—a rebellion not of arms, but of consciousness.
Osagyefo Barker-Vormawor’s essay is not just a critique; it is a diagnosis, a lament, and a call to arms for ethical resistance in the face of normalised indignity.
In choosing to focus on bribes not as isolated acts but as reflections of systemic collapse and human endurance, he invites a deeper national conversation about power, access, and the real cost of institutional failure.
It is a conversation Ghana—and indeed many parts of the world—can no longer afford to postpone.
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