Publications

Zuma Goes to Jail: Implications for Rule of Law, Democracy, and Governance in South Africa

By Peter SAKWE MASUMBE, (PhD)|2021-12-14T14:15:00+00:00December 14th, 2021|Categories: Governance & Democracy Initiative, Publications|Tags: |

In South Africa, the Constitutional Court recently found former president Zuma guilty of contempt of court and landed him a 15-month prison sentence, which is irrefutably a historic judgment in the annals of African politics.

Mali and the Challenges of Democratic Rule: Implications for Continental Democracy

By Peter SAKWE MASUMBE, (PhD)|2021-12-14T14:17:52+00:00December 14th, 2021|Categories: Governance & Democracy Initiative, Publications|Tags: , |

As the transitional government emerged with high ambitions with support from international donors, this initial passion made way for sobering approaches, incarnated by the unhappiness with the transitional government; epitomized by an envisaged general strike by Mali’s biggest trade union federation UNTM.

Higher Education and Social Innovation Ecosystem in Ghana – InnoHub

By InnoHub Ghana|2022-03-29T08:37:55+00:00December 14th, 2021|Categories: Publications, Social Entrepreneurship - Policy Brief|Tags: , , |

Studies show that African higher education institutions (HEIs) are characterized by limited capabilities in applied research for local problem-solving, low-quality teaching and learning, and low adaptability of research outputs to societal challenges among others.

State of Statelessness: Anglophone Cameroonians Born in Refugee Camps

By Tazoacha Francis and Noella Nguyam|2021-12-10T10:28:56+00:00December 9th, 2021|Categories: Peace & Security, Publications|Tags: |

The problem of statelessness has quite evolved over time and a definition has also emerged: a stateless person is a person who is not considered as a national by any State under the operation of its law.

A Return to Constitutional Order and Democratic Governance in Chad: Is the African Union Not Crawling?

By Tazoacha Francis|2021-12-10T08:43:21+00:00December 9th, 2021|Categories: Governance & Democracy Initiative, Publications|Tags: , |

These constitutional violations were serious enough to warrant the African Union suspend and sanction the military junta, yet they remained indifferent and condoned with moves to harness power at the expense of the budding and staggering democracy

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