๐”– Scriptorium
โœฆ   LIBER   โœฆ

๐Ÿ“

Changing Law in Developing Countries

โœ Scribed by J. N. D. Anderson (editor)


Publisher
Routledge
Year
2021
Tongue
English
Leaves
293
Series
Studies on Modern Asia and Africa
Edition
1
Category
Library

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โœฆ Synopsis


The 1960s, in retrospect, may be chiefly remembered for the unprecedented constitutional developments it witnessed in countries emerging from colonial rule. Originally published in 1963, an examination of these constitutional developments from the authoritative pens of the previous Legal Adviser to the Colonial and Commonwealth Relations Offices, and the Legal Adviser to the Colonial Office at the time was, therefore, particularly timely โ€“ for no two men in human history can have had to draft so many constitutional instruments.

One after another of these new constitutions had, moreover, included certain โ€˜Fundamental Rightsโ€™, so a discussion of this subject by a recognised academic authority, together with an examination by an ex-Chief Justice of Allahabad of the constitutional writs which have been so widely used in India to protect these rights, was particularly appropriate. An erudite examination of the origins of the famous phrase โ€˜Justice, Equity and Good Conscienceโ€™ by the Reader in Oriental Laws in the University of London, fittingly concludes the first half of this volume.

Legal developments in these emergent countries, had, however, by no means been limited to the sphere of constitutional law. So the series continues with contributions on the legal profession in African territories, by a former President of the Law Society, and on the problems posed by Islamic law in that continent, by the Professor of Oriental Laws. Criminal Law is represented by a consideration of โ€˜Liability under the Nigerian Criminal Codeโ€™ by an ex-Chief Justice of the Western Region; matters economic and sociological by papers on โ€˜Legal Development and Economic Growth in Africaโ€™ and โ€˜Womenโ€™s Status and Law Reformโ€™ by two experts in Africa law; and developments in Asia by an examination of recent legislation on family law in Pakistan, and of the sources of Chinese Law in Hong Kong, by other members of the staff of the School of Oriental and African Studies.

โœฆ Table of Contents


Cover
Half Title
Title Page
Copyright Page
Original Title Page
Original Copyright Page
Forword
Table of Contents
1. The Authority of the United Kingdom in Dependent Territories
2. Survey of Constitutions Drafted at the Colonial Office Since 1944
3. The Legal Machinery for the Transition from Dependence to Independence
4. The Independence of the Judiciary in Commonwealth Countries
5. Fundamental Rights
6. Constitutional Writs in India
7. Justice, Equity and Good Conscience
8. The Legal Profession in African Territories
9. Islamic Law in Africa: Problems of Today and Tomorrow
10. Liability Under the Nigeria Criminal Code: A Historical and Comparative Study
11. Legal Development and Economic Growth in Africa
12. Women's Status and Law Reform
13. Islamic Family Law: Progress in Pakistan
14. Chinese Law in Hong Kong: The Choice of Sources
Table of Statutes
Table of Cases
Index


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