TY - BOOK AU - Yusuf,Abdulqawi TI - Pan-Africanism and international law T2 - Pocketbooks of the Hague Academy of International Law SN - 9004285040 AV - KQC79 .Y87 PY - 2014/// CY - The Hague, The Netherlands : PB - Hague Academy of International Law KW - Law KW - Africa KW - International law KW - International law and human rights KW - Pan-Africanism KW - fast N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 254-264); Machine generated contents note; ch. I; The origins and evolution of Pan-Africanism --; A; The origins of Pan-Africanism in the diaspora --; B; Pan-Africanism in independent Africa: fighting for total decolonization --; C; Pan-Africanism under the African Union: fostering democratization and development --; ch. II; Pan-Africanism and the jus publicum Europaeum --; A; International law and the jus publicum Europaeum --; B; The jus publicum Europaeum and the colonization of Africa --; C; Early signs of collision between Pan-Africanism and the jus publicum Europaeum --; ch. III; Pan-Africanism and the emergence of African States as subjects of international law --; A; Concerted action to effect change in international law --; B; Rejection or resistance to certain rules and principles --; C; Ambivalence and eclecticism towards other rules; D; A desire to reform old rules and influence the emergence of new rules --; 1; The right of peoples to self-determination --; 2; The legality of assistance to liberation movements and the use of armed force in colonial situations --; 3; The succession of States to treaties --; 4; The formulation of the concept of an Exclusive Economic Zone in the law of the sea --; ch. IV; The institutional and normative evolution of Pan-Africanism: from the Organization of African Unity to the African Union --; A; Rekindling the African peoples' aspirations for stronger unity and solidarity --; B; Eliminating the scourge of internal conflicts --; C; Protecting human and peoples' rights and promoting good governance and the rule of law --; D; Building partnerships between Governments and civil society --; ch. V; Pan-Africanism and the African public law: fostering innovative rules and principles --; A; The innovative principles of the AU Constitutive Act: some illustrative examples; 1; The right of the Union to intervene in a Member State --; 2; Prohibition of unconstitutional changes of government --; 3; Respect for democratic principles and good governance --; B; Other innovative binding instruments: the Kampala Convention --; C; Introducing collective rights into positive law: the right to development --; ch. VI; The African public law and international law: broadening the scope of application of international rules --; A; The specificities of the African Convention on Refugees --; B; The added value of the African Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the Child --; C; The supplementary character of the African Protocol on the Rights of Women --; D; Broadening the scope of environmental protection: the Bamako Convention --; ch. VII; Final observations ER -