9 research outputs found

    Unpacking the African Backlash to the International Criminal Court (ICC): The Case of Uganda and Kenya

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    From early bright beginnings and close cooperation, African relations with the International Criminal Court (ICC or Court) have recently witnessed a sharp deterioration. The explanations for this fall-out vary from the personal style of the first Prosecutor of the Court—Luis Moreno Ocampo—to the lack of a comprehensive appreciation of the reasons for which the institution was established in the first instance. This article specifically zeroes in on the troubled interactions between the Court and the governments of Uganda and Kenya. These two instances demonstrate that while the charge of anti-African bias has become the dominant discourse of contemporary scholarship on the issue, structural and systemic factors are not given enough attention. Particular attention is given to the way the cases of the Lord’s Resistance Army (LRA) and President Uhuru Kenyatta (from Uganda and Kenya respectively) found their way to the ICC and the subsequent developments relating thereto. In doing so, the article explores, among other factors, the way International Criminal Justice was politicised, and its links to enduring questions of global political and economic inequality. Such conditions of inequality find manifestation in the backlash by African countries towards what has been described as the ICC’s selective approach. At the same time, opportunism and double-standards abound on all sides as there is both an inconsistent and hypocritical embrace of the basic tenets of International Criminal Law and Justice. Ultimately, the victims of human rights violations are short-changed while those actors who really need to be brought to account remain beyond sanction

    Governance, Democracy and Development in Uganda Today: A Socio-Legal Examination

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    Uganda has experienced almost two decades of social, political and economic turmoil and turbulence since independence in 1962. In January 1986, the National Resistance Movement/Army (NRM/A) -- a guerrilla grouping that had been at war for five years -- assumed powers of government, on a radical platform of "fundamental change." Since that time, several developments have occurred in the mode of governance, public accountability, human rights observance and popular people's participation in self government. At the same time, the philosophy of the NRM/A continues to be permeated with militarism that has manifested itself in continuing internal conflict in parts of the country, a suspension of political party activity and increasing socioeconomic strife. This paper addresses the nature of the contradictory forces in existence in Uganda today and examines whether the post--1986 innovations are sustainable against the onslaught of the traditional forces of underdevelopment and militarism. Of particular importance is the role and position of those members of civil society (namely women, the intelligentsia, workers and NGOs) in relation to the state in Uganda today and how effectively they can operate as a bulwark against government excess

    Development Financing: The Case of the Uganda Development Bank

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    Governance, Democracy and Development in Uganda Today: A Socio-Legal Examination

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