Towards a Greater Role and Enhanced Effectiveness of National Human Rights Commissions in Advancing the Domestic Implementation of Socioeconomic Rights: Nigeria, South Africa and Uganda as Case Studies

Authors

  • Ayebaesin Jacob Beredugo University of Pretoria
  • Frans Viljoen University of Pretoria

Keywords:

Human Rights Commission

Abstract

Although national Human Rights Commissions (NHRCs) are institutional mechanisms suitable for advancing the domestic implementation of socioeconomic rights, traditional approaches to the advancement of these rights have more readily focused on the role of courts. This process has witnessed the prioritisation of the justiciability of these rights above other non- and quasi-judicial means for their realisation. As a result, contemporary scholarship has barely noticed the role and practical efforts of NHRCs in this regard. To fill this gap, this article evaluates the mandate, activities, and effectiveness of NHRCs in three selected Commonwealth African countries – Nigeria, South Africa and Uganda – and identifies four factors which either impair or enhance their effective performance of this role: the explicit provision of socio-economic rights as justiciable guarantees in the constitutional framework of states; the granting of an explicit legal or constitutional mandate on socio-economic rights to NHRCs; the provision of adequate institutional, functional, and financial independence for NHRCs; and a high level of institutional support from other institutions that ensure states’ accountability for human rights.

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Published

2022-03-09

How to Cite

Beredugo, Ayebaesin Jacob, and Frans Viljoen. 2015. “Towards a Greater Role and Enhanced Effectiveness of National Human Rights Commissions in Advancing the Domestic Implementation of Socioeconomic Rights: Nigeria, South Africa and Uganda As Case Studies”. Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa 48 (3):401-30. https://unisapressjournals.co.za/index.php/CILSA/article/view/10854.

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