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Legalization of Human Rights in Africa: The Institutionalization of Laws Prohibiting State-Sanctioned Violence and Torture

Edited by: Stacey M. Mitchell, Veraline Nchotu, Lem Lilian Atanga

ISBN13: 9781032749495
To be Published: March 2025
Publisher: Routledge
Country of Publication: UK
Format: Hardback
Price: £145.00



Most countries on the African continent have ratified or acceded to several human rights treaties, including the Torture Convention and the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights. This book assesses the progress African countries have made in institutionalizing human rights laws prohibiting torture, extrajudicial killings, and disappearances domestically.

States ratify human rights treaties for a variety of reasons. Some commentators defend an honest sincerity of purpose, whereas others might point to material incentives. The contributors to this volume go beyond the ratification puzzle to instead reframe legalization according to Lon Fuller’s conceptualization of congruence. Congruence is an interactive variable that measures the continuous efforts of government and the public to shape the law and its implementation. By reframing legalization as an ongoing process, the model created by the authors is used to test several hypotheses about what impacts legalization in Africa more broadly, and in countries such as Mali, Cameroon, Botswana, Zimbabwe, and Tunisia, more specifically. The contributors to this volume demonstrate that the legalization of human rights is never a finished product, but is a moving target influenced by exogenous and endogenous phenomena.

This volume is useful for researchers of genocide, human rights, and atrocity prevention, as well as for those interested in legalization and democratization both within Africa and other regions of the world.

Subjects:
Human Rights and Civil Liberties, Other Jurisdictions , Africa
Contents:
List of figures
List of tables
List of photographs

Introduction to Legalization of Human Rights in Africa
By Stacey M. Mitchell, Veraline Nchotu, Lem Lilian Atanga

Part 1: The Theory, The Model, And The International Regimes
Regulating State-Sponsored Violence
1. What is legalization?
By Stacey M. Mitchell
2. An integrative model for the assessment of legalization as
congruence
By Stacey M. Mitchell
3. The international legal framework for prohibitions against
torture, disappearances, and political killings
By Stacey M. Mitchell
4. The African human rights regime
By Stacey M. Mitchell and Lem Lilian Atanga
5. The UN Charter-Based Processes and Evaluations of Africa’s
Conflicts and Human Rights Protections
By Henry F. (Chip) Carey

Part II: Continent-Wide Progress In The Legalization Of Prohibitions
Against Torture, Disappearances And Killings
6. Taking the broad view
By Stacey M. Mitchell, Veraline Nchotu, and Lem Lilian Atanga
7. Do peace missions in Africa matter?
By Miao-ling Lin Hasenkamp and Stacey M. Mitchell
8. How foreign investment fuels social conflicts in Africa
By Yue Lin

Part III: Case-Studies
9. Cameroon and human rights at a time of national crisis
By Roland Djieufack
10. The struggle for human rights in Guinea
By Jean Francois Koly Onivogui
11. Civil society and the struggle for human rights in Tunisia
By Khedija Arfaoui
12. Zimbabwe and a reassessment of Institutional Anomie Theory
By Shannon M. Gibson
13. The power of regional peripheries: The making and unmaking of the
legalization of human rights in Mali
By Miao-ling Lin Hasenkamp
14. Human rights as a moving target in Botswana
By Kholisani Solo
15. Conclusions
By Stacey M. Mitchell, Lem Lilian Atanga and Miao-ling
Lin Hasenkamp

Index