Human Rights Litigation in Africa Under Attack

IF 0.2 Q4 LAW
Ayyoub Jamali, M. Faix
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Abstract

Human rights values, to which international organisations adhere, serve not only as the working premise for achieving their goals but also constitute an inherent part of their legal framework and judicial decisions. Established by States that claim to share a fundamental set of values from the outset and are committed to reflecting these values throughout their activities, the African Union is no exception. The organisation articulated its fundamental principles and values in its founding Treaties, which include, among others, ‘respect for democratic principles, human rights, the rule of law, and good governance.’ Over time, various preventive, monitoring, and enforcement mechanisms have been developed to realise these human rights objectives in the continent. This progress includes the establishment of the African Commission in 1987 and the creation of the African Court in 1998, as well as the expansion of human rights jurisdiction of sub-regional courts over time. This article delves into the resistance faced by the judicial mechanisms used to enforce human rights in Africa. As demonstrated, in all cases under discussion, a State subject to an adverse ruling of the court responded by questioning its legitimacy and authority, advocating for institutional reforms to weaken the fledgling human rights system on the continent. The article highlights the similarities and differences between all cases, illustrating that the impact of political reaction in the case of the continental African Court and the SADC Tribunal has been much more severe than the ECOWAS and the EACJ court. It is argued that the institutional design of the courts, the scale of the community, relative State power, the subject matter of the judgment, the requirement to obtain consensus to revise the founding treaty of the courts, and the engagement of civil societies played crucial roles in determining the type and outcome of backlash in the cases under discussion.
非洲人权诉讼受到攻击
国际组织坚持的人权价值观不仅是实现其目标的工作前提,也是其法律框架和司 法决定的固有组成部分。非洲联盟也不例外,它是由一些国家建立的,这些国家从一开始就声称拥有一套基本的价值观,并致力于在其活动中体现这些价值观。该组织在其创始条约中阐明了其基本原则和价值观,其中包括 "尊重民主原则、人权、法治和善治"。随着时间的推移,为在非洲大陆实现这些人权目标,建立了各种预防、监督和执行机制。这些进展包括 1987 年成立非洲委员会和 1998 年成立非洲法院,以及随着时间的推移扩大次区域法院的人权管辖权。本文深入探讨了非洲用于落实人权的司法机制所面临的阻力。正如所展示的那样,在所讨论的所有案件中,受到法院不利裁决的国家的回应都是质疑其合法性和权威性,主张进行机构改革,以削弱非洲大陆刚刚起步的人权体系。文章强调了所有案例之间的异同,说明政治反应在非洲大陆法院和南部非洲发展共同体法庭案例中的影响要比西非经共体和东非法院严重得多。本文认为,法院的制度设计、社区规模、相对国家权力、判决主题、修改法院成立条约需要达成共识的要求以及民间社会的参与在决定所讨论案例中反弹的类型和结果方面发挥了至关重要的作用。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
16
审稿时长
10 weeks
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