| Acknowledgments |
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ix | |
| Foreword |
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xi | |
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Professor Abimbola Olowofoyeku |
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| Introduction: transitional justice, judicial accountability and the rule of law |
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1 | (6) |
| 1 The case for judicial accountability in transitions |
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7 | (26) |
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7 | (1) |
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State powers and the judiciary |
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8 | (4) |
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The judiciary in authoritarian contexts |
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12 | (1) |
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Judicial accountability and rule of law |
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13 | (1) |
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The case for accountability of the judiciary in transitions |
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14 | (13) |
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17 | (5) |
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22 | (1) |
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23 | (2) |
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25 | (2) |
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27 | (6) |
| 2 Truth, transition, and accountability of the judiciary |
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33 | (17) |
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33 | (1) |
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The judiciary and accountability for the past — the truth commission as an unlikely forum |
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34 | (6) |
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Transition, truth and accountability in Nigeria |
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40 | (5) |
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40 | (2) |
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Wither accountability of the judiciary? |
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42 | (2) |
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The Dele Giwa petition: truth-seeking and the judiciary in Nigeria's transition |
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44 | (1) |
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45 | (5) |
| 3 Political change and judicial reform: an international' and comparative perspective |
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50 | (18) |
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50 | (1) |
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Judicial reform – the international context |
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51 | (4) |
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A comparative perspective |
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55 | (9) |
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Central and Eastern Europe: political change, courts and constitutionalism |
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56 | (5) |
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Institutional transformation sans accountability? The case of Nigeria's National Judicial Council |
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61 | (3) |
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64 | (4) |
| 4 Judicial accountability in political transitions the Nigerian context |
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68 | (22) |
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68 | (1) |
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The transition judiciary: a legal premise for accountability |
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69 | (3) |
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72 | (2) |
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Legal-Jurisprudential dimension |
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74 | (5) |
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Legitimizing military rule |
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74 | (3) |
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Imperatives of popular sovereignty |
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77 | (2) |
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Socio-political dimension |
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79 | (5) |
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79 | (1) |
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Public apathy for due process of law |
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80 | (2) |
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82 | (2) |
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84 | (6) |
| 5 Rights, the judiciary and constitutionalism in transitions |
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90 | (38) |
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90 | (2) |
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Judicial review in the Nigerian court system |
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92 | (1) |
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Backwards with plain-fact jurisprudence: the Oputa Panel care |
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93 | (14) |
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93 | (1) |
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Between executive failure and judicial complacency |
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94 | (2) |
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Again, the ride of kw dilemma |
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96 | (1) |
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The judiciary, transition and the transformative agenda |
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97 | (3) |
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Safety in a cocoon: ignoring international human rights law |
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100 | (2) |
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Privileging domestic law over international law |
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102 | (1) |
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Policy considerations and transitional justice claims |
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103 | (4) |
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Two decisions and the purposive approach: hopes for transformation? |
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107 | (1) |
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The PDP case: when death is not to die |
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107 | (1) |
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A Lacuna, a Formidable Minority and a Slim Majority |
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107 | (2) |
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Breaking away from tradition |
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109 | (1) |
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The ICPC case: Federalism v Commonweal |
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110 | (1) |
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From the doldrums of infamy |
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110 | (3) |
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'Policy united' all the way |
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113 | (2) |
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Validity of purposive jurisprudence in Nigeria's transition |
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115 | (3) |
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Displacing formalism in transitional contexts |
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115 | (1) |
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Deepening the rule of law in transitional contexts |
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116 | (2) |
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118 | (1) |
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Peace, order and good governance to the rescue |
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118 | (1) |
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119 | (2) |
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Ambivalence or new directions? |
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119 | (2) |
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121 | (7) |
| 6 Transition and the judicialization of politics: dialectics of a phenomenon |
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128 | (27) |
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128 | (2) |
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Judicialization of politics, democracy and the rule of law |
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130 | (1) |
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Judicialization of politics and the counter-majoritarian argument |
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131 | (5) |
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Judicialization of politics: an analytical framework |
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136 | (4) |
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140 | (4) |
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A still-born constitutional court: legacy of a failed transition and judiciary |
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144 | (1) |
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Court-packing versus judicial independence |
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145 | (4) |
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149 | (6) |
| 7 Courts to the rescue? The judicialization of politics in Nigeria |
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155 | (28) |
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155 | (1) |
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Democratic transition and judicialization of politics in Nigeria |
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156 | (4) |
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The judiciary in institutional reconstruction |
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157 | (3) |
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The Ladoja case: the Godfather versus the people |
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160 | (5) |
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The socio-political background |
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160 | (1) |
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Neither impeachment nor removal |
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160 | (1) |
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Courts and the political question |
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161 | (2) |
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Checkmating judicial impunity |
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163 | (2) |
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The Obi Tenure case — speaking law to power |
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165 | (4) |
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Towards a new constitutionalism |
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166 | (1) |
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Timely intervention and checkmating electoral impunity |
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167 | (2) |
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Ladoja (No. 2) — between sympathy and the law |
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169 | (1) |
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No to tenure-elongation — the court is plain |
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169 | (1) |
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The judge in the court of the people |
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170 | (3) |
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Turning the tables? Politicization of the judiciary in Nigeria |
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173 | (4) |
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177 | (6) |
| Conclusion |
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183 | (5) |
| Bibliography |
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188 | (13) |
| Index |
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201 | |