Fr. 180.00

Emergent African Union Law - Conceptualization, Delimitation, and Application

English · Hardback

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This edited collection explores the role of law in the regional integration effort in Africa, and assesses the extent to which African Union law is having in impact on domestic law across the continent. It analyses how the African Union is engendering new norms and standards, in areas such as economic regulation and democratic constitutionalism.

List of contents










  • Introduction

  • Part 1. Scoping African Union Law

  • 1: Michèle Olivier: Conceptualising AU Law within the Constitutional Framework of the AU

  • 2: Konstantinos D Magliveras: The Implications of AU Law: Conceptual Analysis with Emphasis on the Institutional Consequences

  • 3: Femi Amao: Framing African Union Law through the Lenses of International Constitutionalization and Federalism

  • Part 2. Harmonization and Integration as Drivers of AU Law

  • 4: Kamala Dawar and George Lipimile: Harmonization and Integration in Africa: The Case of Competition Law and Policy

  • 5: Pablo Iglesias-Rodríguez: The AU and Global Financial Standard-Setting

  • 6: Iyare Otabor-Olubor: The Evolution of the AU Private Business Structure

  • 7: Onyeka K Osuji and Oluwafikunayo D Taiwo: Contextual Centrality of Institutional Arbitration Framework for AU Legal Order

  • Part 3. Addressing Civil and Political Challenges through African Union Law: Perspectives

  • 8: Adaeze Okoye: Is the AU Best Placed to Advance Cross-Cutting Gender Rights' Harmonization of Customary Laws?

  • 9: Emmanuel Kolawole Oke: The Statute of the Pan-African Intellectual Property Organisation: A Human Rights Perspective

  • 10: Eki Yemisi Omorogbe: The AU and Disputed Presidential Elections

  • 11: Chidebe Matthew Nwankwo: Human Rights, Statelessness, and the Right to Nationality (R2N) in Africa: What Can Vertical Structures Achieve?

  • 12: Cristiano d'Orsi: Combating Terrorism and Managing Asylum Seekers and Refugees under AU Law

  • 13: Ben Chigara: The Quasi-Supranational AU and the International Criminal Court

  • Part 4. Addressing Socio-Economic Challenges through African Union Law: Perspectives

  • 14: Chisa Onyejekwe: Development of AU Law: Tax Harmonization and Regional Integration towards Achieving Sustainable Social Structures in Africa

  • 15: Robert Home: Land, Property, and Human Rights in AU Law and Policy

  • 16: Rui Garrido and Aua Baldé: The Right to Education in AU Law

  • 17: Gino Naldi: The Contribution of AU Human Rights Agreements to an Emergent AU Law

  • 18: Eghosa Ekhator: Sustainable Development and the AU Legal Order

  • Part 5: Enforcing African Union Law: Perspectives

  • 19: Konstantinos D Magliveras: The Several Sanctioning Regimes in the AU: Analysis and Synthesis

  • 20: Michèle Olivier: Enforcement Mechanisms in AU Human Rights Treaties: Lessons for the Wider AU Law

  • 21: Ovo Imoedemhe: The AU and Issues of Institutional Capacity and Enforcement

  • 22: Regis Yann Simo: The (Domestic) Enforcement of AU International Economic Law Instruments: Exploring the Desirability of Direct Effect

  • 23: Rhuks Ako: Propagation and Enforcement of AU Law: Perspectives from the Peace and Security Arena

  • 24: Femi Amao and Michèle Olivier: Conclusion: AU Law and its Future: Reform and the Kagame Report



About the author

Olufemi Amao is a Reader in Law at the Sussex Law School, University of Sussex. He is the author of 'African Union Law: The Emergence of a Sui Generis Legal Order' (Routledge, 2019) and 'Corporate Social Responsibility, Human Rights and the Law: Multinational Corporations in Developing Countries' (Routledge, 2011). He previously worked at Brunel University, London (2009-2015) and the University College Cork, Ireland (2008-2009). He was called to the Nigerian Bar in 1999. He is the PI for the AHRC funded African Union Law Research project. (http://africanunionlaw.org/).

Michèle Olivier is an Associate Professor and Programme Director of Law at the Dar Al-Hekma University, Jeddah. She was previously a Professor in International Law at the University of Pretoria and a Reader in the School of Law and Politics at the University of Hull. Before joining academia, she was the Principal State Law Adviser (International Law) for the Department of Foreign Affairs in South Africa. She holds a doctorate in law and a Masters degree in political science. She was one of eight members of the technical committee of constitutional experts responsible for the drafting of the South African Constitution (1993) and acted as a consultant to the African Peer Review Mechanism of the Africa Union assessing governance in a number of African states.

Konstantinos D. Magliveras is a Professor in the Department of Mediterranean Studies at the University of the Aegean, where he has been teaching for the last 20 years. He previously worked in the University of Aberdeen and the University of East Anglia, and undertook post-doctoral research at Erasmus Universiteit Rotterdam.

Summary

This edited collection explores the role of law in the regional integration effort in Africa, and assesses the extent to which African Union law is having in impact on domestic law across the continent. It analyses how the African Union is engendering new norms and standards, in areas such as economic regulation and democratic constitutionalism.

Additional text

No doubt, this pioneering 24-chapter book on the novel concept of AU Law is worth the effort and invaluable to academicians and policymakers alike ... The book is timely and makes a unique contribution both in theory and practice, to jurisprudence on the continent and beyond.

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