01647 2200301 4500001002100000005001500021035002000036008004100056020001800097041000800115082001100123084001700134100001900151700003100170245013800201260003700339300003400376500003200410504003100442520068100473650003801154990002601192990002501218990002501243990002601268990002601294990002501320INLIS00000000000903420221103092415 a0010-0520009034221103 | | eng  a0-527-58464-7 aeng a342.68 a342.68 HAT c0 aHatchard, Jhon0 aMuna Ndulo and Peter Slinn1 aComparative Constitutionalism And Good Governance In The Commenwealth :bAn Eastern And Southern African Perspective /cJhon Hatchard aCambridge :bThomson gale,c2004 axxv, 343 p.; 23 cm. ;c23 cm. aIndeks : Index (p. 343-361) aBBIbliography (p. 325-342) aThis book has been some years in gestation. Conceived in an era of optimism after the almost miraculous constitutional transition in South Africa and the emergence of a new democratic dispensation in other countries of eastern southern Africa, our offspring has emerged from the delivery room in the summer of 2002 in an atmosphere clouded by serious threats to the practice of good governance in the region. The world?s press is full of pessimistic stories of the breakdown of the rule of law in Zimbabwe, once heralded as a model for African development, and of the regional prospect of disastrous famines exacerbated by evidence of governmental corruption and incompetence. 4a1. Contitutional law-Africa, East a06644/MKRI-P/XII-2007 a05793/MKRI-P/IX-2008 a05793/MKRI-P/IX-2008 a06644/MKRI-P/XII-2007 a06644/MKRI-P/XII-2007 a05793/MKRI-P/IX-2008