A comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the new Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection

This study sought to carry out a comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection. Through the gathering and subsequent analysis of data gathered from both primary and secondary sources the research sought to e...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Jongwe, Tapfuma Ronald
Language:English
Published: Midlands State University 2018
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3266
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1779905362126700544
author Jongwe, Tapfuma Ronald
author_facet Jongwe, Tapfuma Ronald
author_sort Jongwe, Tapfuma Ronald
collection DSpace
description This study sought to carry out a comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection. Through the gathering and subsequent analysis of data gathered from both primary and secondary sources the research sought to establish the provisions of the 2013 constitution that guarantee human rights protection and also establish the provisions of the Lancaster House Constitution that were a direct violation of human rights and establish how such provisions have been dealt with as provided for by Chapter 4 of the new constitution or any other provisions provided for in the new constitution. The research was mainly qualitative in nature and used interviews and FDGs as the sources of primary data whilst a thorough document analysis was carried out so as to gather secondary data and build a better understanding of the background of the research problem. The research established that the 2103 Constitution is bay far a better off document than the Lancaster House Constitution as it provides for a Declaration of Rights that is binding and enforceable at law. The research also noted that Zimbabwe stands to enjoy a better human rights record under the new supreme law as among other issues it ensures the separation of powers and establishes key institutions and provides for judicial avenues that may be sought in cases were human rights are violated.
id ir-11408-3266
institution My University
language English
publishDate 2018
publisher Midlands State University
record_format dspace
spelling ir-11408-32662022-06-27T13:49:05Z A comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the new Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection Jongwe, Tapfuma Ronald Human rights protection Lancaster House Constitution Constitution Zimbabwe This study sought to carry out a comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection. Through the gathering and subsequent analysis of data gathered from both primary and secondary sources the research sought to establish the provisions of the 2013 constitution that guarantee human rights protection and also establish the provisions of the Lancaster House Constitution that were a direct violation of human rights and establish how such provisions have been dealt with as provided for by Chapter 4 of the new constitution or any other provisions provided for in the new constitution. The research was mainly qualitative in nature and used interviews and FDGs as the sources of primary data whilst a thorough document analysis was carried out so as to gather secondary data and build a better understanding of the background of the research problem. The research established that the 2103 Constitution is bay far a better off document than the Lancaster House Constitution as it provides for a Declaration of Rights that is binding and enforceable at law. The research also noted that Zimbabwe stands to enjoy a better human rights record under the new supreme law as among other issues it ensures the separation of powers and establishes key institutions and provides for judicial avenues that may be sought in cases were human rights are violated. 2018-10-19T09:23:23Z 2018-10-19T09:23:23Z 2014 http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3266 en open Midlands State University
spellingShingle Human rights protection
Lancaster House Constitution
Constitution
Zimbabwe
Jongwe, Tapfuma Ronald
A comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the new Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection
title A comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the new Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection
title_full A comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the new Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection
title_fullStr A comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the new Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection
title_full_unstemmed A comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the new Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection
title_short A comparative analysis of the Lancaster House Constitution and the new Constitution of Zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection
title_sort comparative analysis of the lancaster house constitution and the new constitution of zimbabwe (2013) in the context of human rights protection
topic Human rights protection
Lancaster House Constitution
Constitution
Zimbabwe
url http://hdl.handle.net/11408/3266
work_keys_str_mv AT jongwetapfumaronald acomparativeanalysisofthelancasterhouseconstitutionandthenewconstitutionofzimbabwe2013inthecontextofhumanrightsprotection
AT jongwetapfumaronald comparativeanalysisofthelancasterhouseconstitutionandthenewconstitutionofzimbabwe2013inthecontextofhumanrightsprotection