Human Rights Under African Constitutions: Realizing the Promise for Ourselves

Front Cover
University of Pennsylvania Press, 2003 - Law - 434 pages

Some of the most massive and persistent violations of human rights occur in African nations. In Human Rights Under African Constitutions: Realizing the Promise for Ourselves, scholars from a wide range of fields present a sober, systematic assessment of the prospects for legal protection of human rights in Africa. In a series of detailed and highly contextual studies of Ethiopia, Ghana, Guinea, Morocco, Mozambique, Nigeria, Rwanda, Senegal, South Africa, Sudan, and Uganda, experts seek to balance the socioeconomic and political diversity of these nations while using the same theoretical framework of legal analysis for each case study.

Standards for human rights protection can be realized only through direct and strong support from a nation's legal and political institutions. The contributors to this volume uniformly conclude that a well-informed and motivated citizenry is the most powerful force for creating the political will necessary to effect change at the national level. In addition to a critical evaluation of the current state of human rights protection in each of these African nations, the contributors outline existing national resources available for protecting human rights and provide recommendations for more effective and practical use of these resources.

 

Contents

Processes of Democratization and Development
29
Competing Visions of Liberal Democracy
52
Building the Rule of Law for Social Development
97
The Imperative of Democratic Transition
152
Nurturing Justice from Liberation Zones to a Stable
182
Combating Legacies of Colonialism and Militarism
211
Genocide
251
The Interdependence of All Human Rights
295
In the Shadows of Civil War and Politicization
342
The Long and Uncertain Road to Democracy
385
List of Contributors
421
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