Revisiting the legitimacy question of the Nigerian 1999 Constitution
Loading...
Date
Authors
Arowosegbe, Jacob O.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Cambridge University Press
Abstract
This article revisits the legitimacy question as it touches the Nigerian 1999 Constitution, bringing to the discourse a review and application of pertinent theoretical perspectives on constitution making and constitutional legitimacy. This theoretical and pragmatic approach introduces a refreshing angle to the debate, revealing the paucity of any attempt to ascribe any legitimacy claim to a constitution with a doubtful normative claim and fraudulent attribution of its source and legitimacy to the people. The author finds the consent basis of constitutional legitimacy as most attractive to a divided state like Nigeria, and concludes by advocating the adoption of a blend of the principles of the constituent assembly and post sovereign constitution-making models for the production of a new people-driven and inclusive constitution to meet the needs of the Nigerian people.
Description
Keywords
Constitution making, Constitutional legitimacy, Nigerian Constitution, Ethnic divisions, Sovereign national conference
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Arowosegbe, J.O. Revisiting the legitimacy question of the Nigerian 1999 Constitution. Global Constitutionalism , Volume 11 , Issue 1 , March 2022 , pp. 27-54,
DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/S2045381721000162.