When Courts Do Politics: Public Interest Law and Litigation in East Africa

Front Cover
Cambridge Scholars Publishing, Jun 23, 2017 - Political Science - 380 pages
Using the phenomenon of public interest litigation (PIL) as the primary focus of analysis, this book explores the manner in which the judicial branch of government in the three East African states of Kenya, Tanzania and Uganda has engaged with questions traditionally off-limits to adjudication and court-based resolution. It is rooted in an incisive investigation of the history of politics and governance in the sub-region, accompanied by an extensive repertoire of judicial decisions. It also provides a critical and informative account of the manner in which courts of law have engaged with State power in a bid to alternatively deliver or subvert justice to the socially marginalized and the politically victimized.

The focus of the book is on judicial struggles over sexual and gender-based discrimination, social justice and poverty, and the adjudication of presidential elections. Employing the device of case deconstruction and analysis, the study uncovers the conceptual and structural factors which have witnessed public interest litigation emerge as a critical factor in the struggle for more inclusive and equitable structures of governance and social order. Needless to say, as judges battle with time-honoured legal precedents, received dogmas and contending (and often antagonistic) societal forces, the struggle in the courts is neither straightforward nor necessarily always transformative.

 

Contents

Introduction
1
Chapter One
15
Chapter Two
36
Chapter Three
76
Chapter Four
112
Chapter Five
159
Chapter Six
216
Chapter Seven
259
InterviewsPersonal Communication
296
Table of Cases
298
Bibliography
310
Index
351
Copyright

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About the author (2017)

J. Oloka-Onyango is a Professor of Law at Makerere University, Uganda, and has been an active litigant, advisor and campaigner on a wide range of human rights and social justice issues both nationally and internationally. His most recent book (co-edited with Josephine Ahikire) is Controlling Consent: Uganda’s 2016 Elections (2017).

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