TY - BOOK AU - Amao,Olufemi TI - African Union law: the emergence of a sui generis legal order SN - 9781138914940 AV - KQE721 .A43 2019 U1 - 341.24/9 23 PY - 2019/// CY - London ; New York : PB - Routledge, Taylor & Francis Group, KW - African Union KW - Law and legislation KW - fast KW - Legislation KW - Commercial law KW - Law KW - Economic aspects KW - Africa KW - Human rights KW - African cooperation KW - Subsidiarity KW - Politics and government N1 - Includes bibliographical references and index; The development of the concepts of African law and African Union law -- Ascertaining the sources of African Union law : a needle in a haystack? -- Membership of the African Union -- African economic and business law : green shoots in the new economic legal order -- Peace, security, the rule of law and African Union law -- Human rights in African Union law -- Economic, social and cultural rights and group rights in African Union law -- Custom, morality, and African Union law : the case of sexual orientation in Africa -- Enforcement of African Union law -- Appendix 1. Constitutive Act of the African Union -- Appendix 2. Protocol on Amendments to the Constitutive Act of the African Union N2 - "This book explores the emergence of African Union (AU) law as a legal order and its implications for existing order in the region. As an authoritative text on the development of AU law, the book covers such pertinent issues as legislative powers, competences, direct effect in AU law, subsidiarity, interventionism, and enforcement of laws. Olufemi Amao argues that there is a gradual movement from intergovernmentalism to supranationalism in the African Union legal order, and explores how this trajectory gradually and incrementally de-emphasises the discourse on nation state sovereignty; a concept that has caused many problems in the African context. Drawing upon EU law as a comparison, the book also examines how the development of supranationalism affects crucial issues such as human rights, democratic reforms, territorial matters, tribal and religious disputes, and economic relations." ER -