Administrative law and environmental governance in Malawi
This paper examines the operations of administrative law in Malawi, and how its mechanisms influence the ways in which environmental agencies function.
This paper examines the operations of administrative law in Malawi, and how its mechanisms influence the ways in which environmental agencies function.
This paper assesses the extent to which the constitutional promise of citizen participation has been realized in Uganda, using environmental regulation as a case study.
The paper reviews how principles of administrative law play out in day to day practices of officers at the local governance level in Uganda, and looks at what kinds of citizen participation can shape decision making, outcomes, actions and processe
Grassroots organizations do not need to wait for the state to implement Voluntary Guidelines on the Responsible Governance of Tenure of Land, Fisheries and Forests in the Context of National Food Security (Tenure Guidelines or TGs).
Undemocratic politics, policy making and law making interpretation and implementation, prove to be drivers of land grabbing in the four country studies presented here.
Kenya’s population is becoming increasingly urban; more than half of Nairobi’s residents live in informal settlements (slums) plagued by cramped living conditions and poor access to basic services.
This evaluation provides interim reflections on the WITS Training Institute, which involved selected researchers in a programme of seminars and skills training (2009), aimed at developing abilities to conceptualize and plan research projects in th
The African Transitional Justice Research Network (ATJRN) seeks to increase the capacity of local level researchers in African countries engaged in transitional justice processes, aiming to improve the skills of African researchers, practitioners