The ECOWAS court as a human rights promoter? Assessing five years' impact of the Koraou slavery judgment

Loading...
Thumbnail Image

Date

Authors

Adjolohoun, Horace Segnonna A.T.

Journal Title

Journal ISSN

Volume Title

Publisher

Kluwer Law International

Abstract

Th e 2005 reform initiated by the Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS) had the double eff ect of putting an end to ten years of judicial lethargy and positioning its Community Court of Justice (ECCJ) as a promising international human rights body. One of the most illustrative cases of the Court’s impact is the landmark Koraou (Slavery) judgment in which the ECCJ condemned Niger for failing to protect the complainant from enslavement by a third party. Five years aft er the Koraou decision, this paper uses empirical based theories, case study and factual evidence to interrogate whether the ECCJ’s judgment has had any further eff ect than just restoring the dignity of an individual litigant. Such assessment is important to thousands of other human beings who still live in bondage in the rest of the region. Ultimately, the paper seeks to demonstrate that although it has not reached the irradiating model of the European Court of Human Rights, the ECCJ has the potential of becoming a human rights promoter in the region and beyond.

Description

Keywords

Economic Community of West African States (ECOWAS), Judicial lethargy, Community Court of Justice (ECCJ), Human rights, Judgment

Sustainable Development Goals

Citation

Adjolohoun, HS 2013, 'The ECOWAS court as a human rights promoter? Assessing five years' impact of the Koraou slavery judgment', Netherlands Quarterly of Human Rights, vol. 31, no. 3, pp. 342-371.