International Law in Post-Colonial Africa
Table of contents
Note by the Series Editor. About the Author. Preface. I: Creating and Situating International Law. 1. Custom, Authority and the Creation of International Law. 2. Situating International Law in Municipal Legal Systems in Africa. II: Pre-Independence Treaty Obligations and the Post-Colonial State. 3. The Newly Emergent State and the Devolution of Pre-Independence Treaties. 4. Succession to Treaties and International Fluvial Law in Africa: The Niger Treaties. III: Human Rights. 5. Contextualizing Democracy and Human Rights in Africa. 6. Protecting Human Rights in the Constitution: The Case of Malawi. IV: Refugee Rights. 7. The Refugee Problem in Post-Apartheid Southern Africa. 8. Refugees, Law and Politics: The Evolution of Refugee Policy in Malawi. V: Territory, Sovereignty and Dispute Settlement. 9. The Peaceful Settlement of International Disputes in Post-Colonial Africa: The First Two Decades. 10. Regulating the Common Utilization and Management of International Watercourses: The Senegal Regime. VI: Implementing New International Law. 11. Southern African Land-Locked States and Rights of Access and Transit under the New Law of the Sea. 12. Environment and Development in Africa in the 1990s: Some Legal Issues. Appendix: Bilateral Treaties Concluded by the United Kingdom and Other Parties Still in Force in Malawi. Index. Index of Cases.
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Yun Zhao
While litigation will continue to have a role in resolving disputes, developments should be made to accommodate technological improvements. Various parties have carried out different projects providing dispute resolution services for electronic commerce, which provide the basis for formulating a ...
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David Schweigman
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Edited by Menno T. Kamminga and Saman Zia-Zarifi
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Kaiyan Homi Kaikobad
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Konstantinos D. Magliveras
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Juliane Kokott
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Karel C. Wellens
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