Human rights and public interest litigation in East Africa: A bird’s eye view.

IF 1.6 3区 社会学 Q1 LAW George Washington Law Review Pub Date : 2015-01-05 DOI:10.2139/SSRN.2606120
J. Oloka-Onyango
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引用次数: 5

Abstract

Despite the growing use of public interest litigation (PIL) as a mechanism for pursuing the goals of social justice and enhanced democratic constitutionalism, there is scant comparative analysis of the phenomenon among the three East African countries of Kenya, Tanzania, and Uganda. In tandem with the regional East African Court of Justice (EACJ) to which all three countries are members, PIL is growing at a significant pace and has the potential to impact the structures of governance, accountability, and equality in the region. This Article analyzes the manner in which this type of litigation has grown, and assesses the extent to which it has affected socioeconomic and political conditions in the region. Using the analogy of cement and its unique properties, the examination is conducted against the backdrop of the constitutional developments that have taken place in East Africa over the last twenty years, starting with the promulgation of a new constitution for Uganda in 1995 (aging cement), considering the 2010 ‘transformative constitution’ in Kenya (setting cement), and engaging with the current debate over the introduction of a new constitutional instrument in Tanzania, where the cement is undergoing a ‘remixing.’ Does PIL offer a serious and sustainable antidote to the three countries’ experiences of authoritarian rule, judicial lethargy, and community marginalization?
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东非的人权与公益诉讼:鸟瞰。
尽管越来越多地使用公益诉讼(PIL)作为追求社会正义目标和加强民主宪政的机制,但对肯尼亚、坦桑尼亚和乌干达这三个东非国家的这一现象的比较分析却很少。与这三个国家都是成员的东非地区法院(EACJ)一起,PIL正在以惊人的速度增长,并有可能影响该地区的治理结构、问责制和平等。本文分析了这类诉讼增长的方式,并评估了它对该地区社会经济和政治状况的影响程度。利用水泥及其独特属性的类比,本研究是在过去二十年来东非发生的宪法发展的背景下进行的,从1995年乌干达颁布新宪法(老化水泥)开始,考虑到2010年肯尼亚的“变革宪法”(水泥),并参与当前关于在坦桑尼亚引入新宪法文书的辩论。在那里,水泥正在进行“再混合”。“PIL是否为这三个国家的专制统治、司法冷漠和社区边缘化提供了一剂严肃而可持续的解药?”
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0.00%
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2
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