The African Regional Human and Peoples’ Rights System: 40 years of progress and challenges

Juan Bautista Cartes Rodríguez

Résumé


The purpose of this paper is to provide a global and detailed analysis of the African regional human rights system; although this system did not start functioning until the decade of the eighties of the 20th century, it has evolved considerably once the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights was adopted. Thus, several other treaties followed it, of which the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child and the Protocol to the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights on the Rights of Women in Africa can be pointed out, and all of them with their own specificities and weaknesses, which will also be pointed out. And even though initially only the creation of protection and control mechanisms was foreseen – the African Commission on Human and People’s Rights and the African Committee of Experts on the Rights and Welfare of the Child – after 1998, the African Court on Human and Peoples’ Rights was added, which has progressively adopted a protectionist and growing jurisprudence; but also that, as its predecessors, will face different challenges, among which the reform process of the judicial bodies of the African Union themselves.

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DOI: https://doi.org/10.5102/rdi.v18i3.7975

ISSN 2236-997X (impresso) - ISSN 2237-1036 (on-line)

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