Fr. 220.00

Ending Africa''s Energy Deficit and the Law - Achieving Sustainable Energy for All in Africa

English · Hardback

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Informationen zum Autor Professor Omorogbe started her legal career as a legal practitioner in the law firm of Solomon Asemota & Co. in 1980 and later joined the Faculty of Law, University of Benin as a lecturer. She moved to the University of Lagos as a Senior lecturer, where she remained until her appointment as a professor of law of the University of Ibadan. She was Dean of the Faculty of Law and was appointed as Secretary to the Corporation and Legal Adviser of Nigerian National Petroleum Corporation. She is currently a research professor at the Nigerian Institute of Advanced Legal Studies, Abuja, Nigeria. Prof Omorogbe has several publications, including books, monographs, book chapters, and articles in leading international journals. She is also a regular speaker at workshops and conferences internationally and within Nigeria.Professor Ordor completed an LLB (Hons) at the University of Jos, was admitted to the Nigerian bar, and practised in the law office of Dr. Ibik in Enugu. She then worked as a Programme Officer in two non-profits, while studying the LLM at the University of Nigeria. She was appointed to a teaching position at the Nigerian Law School, awarded a PhD at the University of Cape Town, and took up a postdoctoral research fellowship at the Institute of Development and Labour Law, UCT. She has held visiting fellowships at the African Gender Institute, UCT, the Johns Hopkins University Institute for Policy Studies, Centre for Civil Society Studies, and is a 2009 international fellowship alumna of the American Association of University Women. She was appointed Director of the newly established Centre for Comparative Law in Africa. Klappentext The need for energy might be universal, but access to it is not. Omorogbe and Ordor bring together experts in their field to ask how corruption and limited regulation have stalled progress in Africa, examining the impact on disabled people, women, and children, and its relation to environmental and humanitarian concerns. Zusammenfassung The need for energy might be universal, but access to it is not. Omorogbe and Ordor bring together experts in their field to ask how corruption and limited regulation have stalled progress in Africa, examining the impact on disabled people, women, and children, and its relation to environmental and humanitarian concerns....

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