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SOME LESSONS ON CONSTITUTION-MAKING FROM ZIMBABWE

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  10 December 2001

Extract

The former (and late lamented) Chief Justice of South Africa, Justice Ismail Mohammed, once observed that:

“The constitution of a nation is not simply a statute which mechanically defines the structures of government and the relations between the government and the governed, it is a ‘mirror of the national soul’, the identification of the ideals and aspirations of a nation, the articulation of the values binding its people and disciplining its government.”

Further, as van der Vyer has warned, “. . . a superimposed constitutional formulae or constitutional arrangements that . . . do not address the real causes of discontent, are sure to generate their own legitimacy crisis.” It follows that the development of an appropriate procedure for constitution-making is of the greatest practical importance. This short comment seeks to examine critically the much-publicized efforts in Zimbabwe to develop a new autochthonous constitution and to draw some lessons therefrom.

Type
Regular Article
Copyright
© 2001 School of Oriental and African Studies

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