Human Rights Law in Africa, Volume 4 (1999)

Author:   Christof Heyns
Publisher:   Kluwer Law International
Volume:   4
ISBN:  

9789041118493


Pages:   632
Publication Date:   01 June 2002
Format:   Hardback
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
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Human Rights Law in Africa, Volume 4 (1999)


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Overview

The Human Rights Law in Africa series is an evolving reference work on human rights law in Africa. It covers, in particular, the primary documents related to human rights law in Africa of the United Nations, the Organization of African Unity, and the domestic legal systems of all 53 African countries. Some selected factual discussions are also included, as well as bibliographies. The series has been published on an annual basis since 1996 - later volumes supplement and do not replace earlier ones. Each volume covers new documents available to the editors up to the 1st of January of that year. Documents published in earlier volumes and that are still valid are not reprinted in subsequent volumes; instead readers are provided with the appropriate references to earlier volumes.

Full Product Details

Author:   Christof Heyns
Publisher:   Kluwer Law International
Imprint:   Kluwer Law International
Volume:   4
Weight:   2.006kg
ISBN:  

9789041118493


ISBN 10:   9041118497
Pages:   632
Publication Date:   01 June 2002
Audience:   Professional and scholarly ,  Professional and scholarly ,  Professional & Vocational ,  Postgraduate, Research & Scholarly
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active
Availability:   Available To Order   Availability explained
We have confirmation that this item is in stock with the supplier. It will be ordered in for you and dispatched immediately.

Table of Contents

Introduction. Part One: The United Nations and Human Rights in Africa. Chart of ratifications of the main UN human rights treaties by African states. Reservations, interpretive declarations and objections. Discussion of African states and the UN human rights instruments. The International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda (ICTR). Part Two: The Regional Protection of Human Rights in Africa. 1. The Organization of African Unity. Organogram of the OAU. Chart of ratifications of the main OAU human rights treaties. Reservations, interpretive declarations and objections. Texts of human rights and related instruments of the OAU. Documents of the Assembly of Heads of State and Government. Documents of the Council of Ministers. Documents of the African Commission on Human and Peoples' Rights. The African Court on Human and Peoples' Rights. Discussion of the African regional human rights system. 2. Other Documents on Human Rights in Africa. 3. Sub-Regional Institutions and Human Rights in Africa. Arab Maghreb Union. Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA). Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS). Southern African Development Community (SADC). 4. The European Union and Human Rights in Africa. 5. The Commonwealth of Nations and Human Rights in Africa. 6. The Arab League of Nations and Human Rights in Africa. 7. The Organization of the Islamic Conference. 8. The Francophonie and Human Rights in Africa. Part Three: Human Rights Law of the Countries of Africa. Schedule of previous and forthcoming elections in Africa. Algeria. Angola. Benin. Botswana. Burkina Faso. Burundi. Cameroon. Cape Verde. Central African Republic. Chad. Comoros. Congo. Cote D'Ivoire. Democratic Republic of Congo. Djibouti. Egypt. Equatorial Guinea. Eritrea. Ethiopia. Gabon. The Gambia. Ghana. Guinea. Guinea-Bissau. Kenya. Lesotho. Liberia. Libya. Madagascar. Malawi. Mali. Mauritania. Mauritius. Morocco. Mozambique. Namibia. Niger. Nigeria. Rwanda. Sao Tome and Principe. Senegal. Seychelles. Sierra Leone. Somalia. South Africa. Sudan. Swaziland. Tanzania. Togo. Tunisia. Uganda. Zambia. Zimbabwe.

Reviews

' There is no doubt that the Series fills a very important gap, and the wealth of information provided will ensure that it will quickly become an invaluable and indispensable research and reference tool for anyone working in the field of human rights protection in African. The editor is therefore to be warmly congratulated for<br>providing such researchers with this luxury.'<br>Abdul J. Koroma, Judge, International Court of Justice, in Leiden Journal of International Law.<br>' This work will prove to be an invaluable research tool for all those wishing to investigate the current state of human rights protection in Africa.'<br> The Netherlands International Law Review. <br> This book fills a large void.'<br> Immigration and Nationality Law & Practice. <br> This book is an excellent contribution to the growing number of publications on African human rights law. It could serve as an important tool for African human rights researchers and advocates.' <br> African Legal Aid Quarterly.<br> This compilation provides, between two covers, the fundamental national human rights law of each African nation editor has quite admirably assembled the key provisions on which decision-makers must rely for the rule of law on the African Continent and, thus, a virtual snapshot of the region's positive law on human rights.'<br> American Society of International Law Newsletter. <br> [The Series] will soon become indispensable in the field of human rights in Africa.'<br> Austrian Review of International and European Law. <br> This Series deserves to enjoy the widest possible use in order to make its full contribution to the emerging transformation of the African constitutional and politicallandscape.'<br> South African Yearbook of International Law. <br> [The Series] is an easily accessible, informative reference book is is an essential starting point for those wishing to conduct research into any African country and human rights from within or outside Africa.'<br> African Journal of International and Comparative Law/RADIC. <br> Indispensable for the researcher.'<br> Annuaire Frangais de Droit International. <br> The editors are clearly determined to redress the knowledge imbalance in terms of which only materials on Western subjects are regularly available on the shelves or the Internet. With the launch of the Series, this picture is bound to change significantly. Indeed, the Series has already begun to impact positively on African universities and other research institutions. Many scholars otherwise denied access to information on human rights law now have it at their fingertips.'<br> South African Journal on Human Rights. <br> There is no doubt that the Series fills a very important gap, and the wealth of information provided will ensure that it will quickly become an invaluable and indispensable research and reference tool for anyone working in the field of human rights protection in African. The editor is therefore to be warmly congratulated for providing such researchers with this luxury.'<br>Abdul J. Koroma, Judge, International Court of Justice, in Leiden Journal of International Law.<br>


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