AHRLJ Volume 16 No 2 2016

Published by Pretoria University Law Press (PULP)
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Editorial

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Articles

Interpretation and international law in South African courts: The Supreme Court of Appeal and the Al Bashir saga

by Dire Tladi
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Laws in conflict: The relationship between human rights and international humanitarian law under the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights

by Michaela Hailbronner
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Assessing enabling rights: Striking similarities in troubling implementation of the rights to protest and access to information in South Africa

 Lisa Chamberlain
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Boko Haram and sexual terrorism: The conspiracy of silence of the Nigerian anti-terrorism laws

 Christiana E Attah
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The admissibility in Namibia of evidence obtained through human rights violations

by Jamil D Mujuzi
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Child justice administration in the Nigerian Child Rights Act: Lessons from South Africa

by Mariam A Abdulraheem-Mustapha
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A comparison between the position of child marriage ‘victims’ and child soldiers: Towards a nuanced approach

by Mia Swart and Sabreen Hassen
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Stopping mass atrocities in Africa and the Pretoria Principles: Triggering military intervention in Darfur (Sudan) and Libya under article 4(h) of the Constitutive Act of the African Union

by Juan-Pablo Perez-Leon-Acevedo
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The story of a legal transplant: The right to free, prior and informed consent in sub-Saharan Africa

by Ricarda Roesch
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Recent developments

Human rights developments in the African Union during 2015

by Magnus Killander
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Mudzuru & Another v The Minister of Justice, Legal and Parliamentary Affairs & 2 Others: A review

by Julia Sloth-Nielsen and Kuda Hove
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The Pretoria University Law Press (PULP) is based at the Faculty of Law, University of Pretoria, South Africa and endeavours to publish and make available innovative, high-quality scholarly texts on law in Africa. Visit the PULP website:
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