The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe
LLM === Department pf Public Law === Capital punishment has been widely applied by countries since time immemorial. The concept, however, is highly controversial. That is, on the one hand, the anti-abolitionist states argue that it is an effective form of punishment, on the other side; the abolition...
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-univen-oai-univendspace.univen.ac.za-11602-11612020-05-07T03:17:25Z The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe Moyo, Octavia Litshani van der Walt, T. Jegede, A. O. African Charter African Charter 2013 Constitution Human rights Zimbabwe 341.486891 Capital punishment -- Zimbabwe Criminal law -- Zimbabwe Punishment -- Zimbabwe Death row -- Zimbabwe Public law -- Zimbabwe Human rights -- Zimbabwe Civil rights -- Zimbabwe LLM Department pf Public Law Capital punishment has been widely applied by countries since time immemorial. The concept, however, is highly controversial. That is, on the one hand, the anti-abolitionist states argue that it is an effective form of punishment, on the other side; the abolitionist states contend that it is an unjustifiable infringement of people’s fundamental right to life. There have been calls, both regionally and globally, for a moratorium on the death penalty. The Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights was promulgated as a move towards the abolition of the death penalty in all countries and states in the world. Article 1 (2) of the instrument states that, “Each state party shall take all necessary measures to abolish the death penalty within its jurisdiction”. At regional level, Article 4 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights provides that all human beings are inviolable and entitled to the respect and integrity of their person. As such, no one may be deprived arbitrarily of this right. In addition, Article 1 of the Protocol to the African Charter provides that the death penalty shall not be applied by state parties in their territories or any person within their jurisdiction. Despite the current global and regional trends towards the abolition of the death penalty and its inherent controversy, Zimbabwe remains anti-abolitionist, and entrenched the death penalty in section 48 (2) of its 2013 Constitution. Adopting a doctrinal research methodology, the study critically analyses section 48 (2) (d) of Zimbabwe’s Constitution, and examines how it affects key fundamental rights as well as the way forward in the light of the international human rights standards on the death penalty. NRF 2018 2018-07-19T14:18:51Z 2018-07-19T14:18:51Z 2018-05-18 Dissertation Moyo, Octavia Litshani (2018) The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe. University of Venda, South Africa,<http://hdl.handle.net/11602/1161>. http://hdl.handle.net/11602/1161 en University of Venda 1 online resource (viii, 114 leaves) |
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African Charter African Charter 2013 Constitution Human rights Zimbabwe 341.486891 Capital punishment -- Zimbabwe Criminal law -- Zimbabwe Punishment -- Zimbabwe Death row -- Zimbabwe Public law -- Zimbabwe Human rights -- Zimbabwe Civil rights -- Zimbabwe |
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African Charter African Charter 2013 Constitution Human rights Zimbabwe 341.486891 Capital punishment -- Zimbabwe Criminal law -- Zimbabwe Punishment -- Zimbabwe Death row -- Zimbabwe Public law -- Zimbabwe Human rights -- Zimbabwe Civil rights -- Zimbabwe Moyo, Octavia Litshani The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe |
description |
LLM === Department pf Public Law === Capital punishment has been widely applied by countries since time immemorial. The concept, however, is highly controversial. That is, on the one hand, the anti-abolitionist states argue that it is an effective form of punishment, on the other side; the abolitionist states contend that it is an unjustifiable infringement of people’s fundamental right to life. There have been calls, both regionally and globally, for a moratorium on the death penalty. The Second Optional Protocol to the International Covenant on Civil and Political Rights was promulgated as a move towards the abolition of the death penalty in all countries and states in the world. Article 1 (2) of the instrument states that, “Each state party shall take all necessary measures to abolish the death penalty within its jurisdiction”. At regional level, Article 4 of the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights provides that all human beings are inviolable and entitled to the respect and integrity of their person. As such, no one may be deprived arbitrarily of this right. In addition, Article 1 of the Protocol to the African Charter provides that the death penalty shall not be applied by state parties in their territories or any person within their jurisdiction.
Despite the current global and regional trends towards the abolition of the death penalty and its inherent controversy, Zimbabwe remains anti-abolitionist, and entrenched the death penalty in section 48 (2) of its 2013 Constitution. Adopting a doctrinal research methodology, the study critically analyses section 48 (2) (d) of Zimbabwe’s Constitution, and examines how it affects key fundamental rights as well as the way forward in the light of the international human rights standards on the death penalty. === NRF |
author2 |
van der Walt, T. |
author_facet |
van der Walt, T. Moyo, Octavia Litshani |
author |
Moyo, Octavia Litshani |
author_sort |
Moyo, Octavia Litshani |
title |
The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe |
title_short |
The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe |
title_full |
The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe |
title_fullStr |
The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe |
title_full_unstemmed |
The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe |
title_sort |
human rights implications of the application of the death penalty in zimbabwe |
publishDate |
2018 |
url |
Moyo, Octavia Litshani (2018) The Human Rights Implications of the Application of the Death Penalty in Zimbabwe. University of Venda, South Africa,<http://hdl.handle.net/11602/1161>. http://hdl.handle.net/11602/1161 |
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AT moyooctavialitshani thehumanrightsimplicationsoftheapplicationofthedeathpenaltyinzimbabwe AT moyooctavialitshani humanrightsimplicationsoftheapplicationofthedeathpenaltyinzimbabwe |
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