posted on 2024-09-06, 00:03authored bySimbi V. Mubako
This article is about the application of the Zambian Bill of Rights to real life by the Courts. In a wider sense it is also a comparative study of similar types of constitutional devices. The article was originally written several years ago during my days as an academic lawyer. It has been updated a few times up until 1981 when publication was expected but then became unavoidably delayed. Therefore I do not lay any claim to be making an up to date statement of Zambian law or any other law that is referred to. However I do believe that most of what is stated is still valid though not exhaustive. Perhaps the article will prove more valuable to the reader with a more universal interest in fundamental rights and the way they have been conceived and interpreted in various jurisdictions over the last century.
A legal analysis of how the Zambian Bill of Rights is applied in real life situations in Zambian courts of law.
History
Publisher
Faculty of Law, University of Zimbabwe (UZ)
Citation
Mubako, S.V. (1983) Fundamental Rights and Judicial Review: The Zambian Experience. The Zimbabwe Law Review (ZLRev.), vol. 1&2, (pp. 97-132). UZ, Mt. Pleasant, Harare: Faculty of Law.