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The Emergent African Union Law: Conceptualization, Delimitation, and Application
This edited collection explores the role of law in the regional integration effort in Africa, and assesses the extent to which African Union law is having in impact on domestic law across the continent. It analyses how the African Union is engendering new norms and standards, in areas such as economic regulation and democratic constitutionalism.
Author(s) | Edited by Olufemi Amao (Reader in Law, Reader in Law, Sussex Law School, University of Sussex), Michele Olivier (Director of Law and Associate Professor at the Department of Law, Diplomacy, and International Relations, Director of Law and Associate Profes |
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Publisher | Oxford University Press |
Format | Hardback |
Pages | 496 |
Published in | United Kingdom |
Published | 21 Oct 2021 |
Availability | Available |
This edited collection explores the role of law in the regional integration effort in Africa, and assesses the extent to which African Union law is having in impact on domestic law across the continent. It analyses how the African Union is engendering new norms and standards, in areas such as economic regulation and democratic constitutionalism.
Femi Amao: Introduction Part 1. Scoping African Union Law 1: Michele Olivier: Conceptualising AU Law within the Constitutional Framework of the AU 2: Konstantinos D Magliveras: The Implications of AU Law: Conceptual Analysis with Emphasis on the Instit
Olufemi Amao is a Reader in Law at the Sussex Law School, University of Sussex. He is the author of 'African Union Law: The Emergence of a Sui Generis Legal Order' (Routledge, 2019) and 'Corporate Social Responsibility, Human Rights and the Law: Multinati