The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa : exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal

In a democracy it is the citizens who choose their leaders. Through elections, the people constitute government to preside over public affairs. However, in several African countries the quality of the elections has been vitiated by fraud, incompetence, unequal playing field and violence. Part of the...

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Main Author: Kaaba, O'Brien
Other Authors: Fagbayibo, Babatunde
Format: Others
Language:en
Published: 2016
Subjects:
Online Access:Kaaba, O'Brien (2015) The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa: exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20162>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20162
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-umkn-dsp01.int.unisa.ac.za-10500-201622016-05-12T04:14:20Z The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa : exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal Kaaba, O'Brien Fagbayibo, Babatunde Adjudication African Union Courts Democracy Elections Judiciary Presidential elections Regional integration Sub-regional courts Supranational adjudication 342.706 Contested elections -- Africa Elections -- Corrupt practices -- Africa Presidents -- Africa -- Election Election monitoring -- Africa Election law -- Africa In a democracy it is the citizens who choose their leaders. Through elections, the people constitute government to preside over public affairs. However, in several African countries the quality of the elections has been vitiated by fraud, incompetence, unequal playing field and violence. Part of the problem is historical. Within the first decade of attaining independence in the 1950s and 1960s, many African regimes rapidly descended into autocracy and many countries formally recognised one-party regimes. Despite many one-party regimes having been abolished after the democratisation wave of the late 1980s and early 1990s, challenges of holding free and fair elections persist. Several elections held since this democratic wave were generally not considered by independent observers as free and fair. Indeed Africa has become well known for flawed elections, such as was the case in the 2007 elections in Kenya, the 2008 elections in Zimbabwe and the 2010 elections in Ivory Coast. Due to the stifled democratic climate, where even elections had a predetermined outcome, coups became a common and regular method of showing discontent or removing government. While the phenomenon of problematic elections is going on, at the continental level, Africa seems to be making renewed commitment towards democratic governance. With the transformation of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) into the African Union (AU) through the adoption of the Constitutive Act of the African Union in 2000, the AU, inter alia, committed to promoting “democratic principles and institutions, popular participation and good governance” and seems determined to depart from the legacy of poor governance. It is in view of the foregoing background that this research sought to investigate the challenges the judiciary in Africa has faced in adjudicating presidential election disputes. And, in light of the growing trend towards establishing common African democratic standards and seeking collective solutions, the research also sought to explore the viability of establishing a continental supranational mechanism for resolving disputed presidential elections through adjudication. Public, Constitutional and International Law LLD 2016-05-09T13:19:22Z 2016-05-09T13:19:22Z 2015-06 2016-05-09 Thesis Kaaba, O'Brien (2015) The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa: exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20162> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20162 en 1 online resource (xviii, 273 pages)
collection NDLTD
language en
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Adjudication
African Union
Courts
Democracy
Elections
Judiciary
Presidential elections
Regional integration
Sub-regional courts
Supranational adjudication
342.706
Contested elections -- Africa
Elections -- Corrupt practices -- Africa
Presidents -- Africa -- Election
Election monitoring -- Africa
Election law -- Africa
spellingShingle Adjudication
African Union
Courts
Democracy
Elections
Judiciary
Presidential elections
Regional integration
Sub-regional courts
Supranational adjudication
342.706
Contested elections -- Africa
Elections -- Corrupt practices -- Africa
Presidents -- Africa -- Election
Election monitoring -- Africa
Election law -- Africa
Kaaba, O'Brien
The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa : exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal
description In a democracy it is the citizens who choose their leaders. Through elections, the people constitute government to preside over public affairs. However, in several African countries the quality of the elections has been vitiated by fraud, incompetence, unequal playing field and violence. Part of the problem is historical. Within the first decade of attaining independence in the 1950s and 1960s, many African regimes rapidly descended into autocracy and many countries formally recognised one-party regimes. Despite many one-party regimes having been abolished after the democratisation wave of the late 1980s and early 1990s, challenges of holding free and fair elections persist. Several elections held since this democratic wave were generally not considered by independent observers as free and fair. Indeed Africa has become well known for flawed elections, such as was the case in the 2007 elections in Kenya, the 2008 elections in Zimbabwe and the 2010 elections in Ivory Coast. Due to the stifled democratic climate, where even elections had a predetermined outcome, coups became a common and regular method of showing discontent or removing government. While the phenomenon of problematic elections is going on, at the continental level, Africa seems to be making renewed commitment towards democratic governance. With the transformation of the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) into the African Union (AU) through the adoption of the Constitutive Act of the African Union in 2000, the AU, inter alia, committed to promoting “democratic principles and institutions, popular participation and good governance” and seems determined to depart from the legacy of poor governance. It is in view of the foregoing background that this research sought to investigate the challenges the judiciary in Africa has faced in adjudicating presidential election disputes. And, in light of the growing trend towards establishing common African democratic standards and seeking collective solutions, the research also sought to explore the viability of establishing a continental supranational mechanism for resolving disputed presidential elections through adjudication. === Public, Constitutional and International Law === LLD
author2 Fagbayibo, Babatunde
author_facet Fagbayibo, Babatunde
Kaaba, O'Brien
author Kaaba, O'Brien
author_sort Kaaba, O'Brien
title The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa : exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal
title_short The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa : exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal
title_full The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa : exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal
title_fullStr The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa : exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal
title_full_unstemmed The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa : exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal
title_sort challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in africa : exploring the viability of establishing an african supranational elections tribunal
publishDate 2016
url Kaaba, O'Brien (2015) The challenges of adjudicating presidential election disputes in Africa: exploring the viability of establishing an African supranational elections tribunal, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20162>
http://hdl.handle.net/10500/20162
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