ABSTRACT

The issues addressed in this rewarding book provide new insight into the way we conceive, reflect and study the problems of political transformation and constitution-making in Africa. The study provides a refreshingly in-depth analysis of the strengths and weaknesses of constitutional provisions for managing the challenges of race, religion, ethnicity, citizenship, civil liberties and civil-military relations in Africa's transitional democracies. Tracing emerging trends in constitution-making, it blends the theory of constitutional democracy with case studies, and defines the imperative of social justice.

chapter |2 pages

INTRODUCTION

part |2 pages

SECTION ONE: AFRICAN VALUES OF GOVERNMENT

part |2 pages

SECTION TWO: CITIZENSHIP AND CIVIL LIBERTIES

part |2 pages

SECTION THREE: ETHNICITY AND PLURALISM

part |2 pages

SECTION FOUR: CONTROLLING THE MILITARY AND CIVIL CONFLICT

part |2 pages

EPILOGUE