Audience Participation and Community Transformation: Contemporary Student-Led Theatre for Development Practice in Ghana
Audience Participation and Community Transformation: Contemporary Student-Led Theatre for Development Practice in Ghana
Theatre for Development (TfD) has emerged as a powerful participatory methodology for
catalyzing community transformation in Ghana, yet critical questions persist regarding how
audience participation actually translates into sustained behavioral change and structural
transformation. This article examines the role of audience participation in Ghanaian TfD
projects through analysis of theoretical frameworks, established case studies, and recent
student-led initiatives in local communities (2024–2025). Five key mechanisms of audience
participation are identified: extended community entry, collaborative performance creation,
interactive theatrical techniques, structured post-performance dialogue, and sustained
engagement. Drawing on recent empirical evidence from four university-supervised TfD
projects, all conducted by students from the Department of Theatre Arts at the University of
Education Winneba, and reaching over 12,000 community members across diverse
development issues; environmental sustainability, educational equity, public health, and
economic empowerment, the study demonstrates that participatory theatre, when thoughtfully
designed and implemented with authentic community partnerships and linkages to concrete
resources, can contribute meaningfully to individual empowerment, community mobilization,
and sustainable development outcomes. However, persistent challenges including power
dynamics, resource constraints, facilitation capacity gaps, and sustainability limitations
require deliberate strategies including inclusive facilitation, community control throughout
project cycles, institutional alignment, and long-term commitment from practitioners,
policymakers, and development institutions. The evidence suggests that TfD’s transformative
potential can be realized by embracing participation as a technique of redistributing power to marginalized voices in development processes.
