A B C D E F G H I J K L M N O P Q R S T U V W X Y Z All
Obidimma, Angela E.
- Mitigating the Injustice of the Customary Law Relating to Inheritance of Landed Property by Women amongst the Igbo People of Nigeria
Authors
Source
International Journal of Innovative Research and Development, Vol 4, No 11 (2015), Pagination:Abstract
Under the customary law of the Igbo People of Southeast Nigeria, women-wives and daughters, do not have right of inheritance especially of landed property. This is predicated on the customary law principle of primogeniture pursuant to which succession is through the eldest male in the family. Consequent upon this customary practice, women have suffered the injustice of discrimination and degradation in spite of the constitutionally-guaranteed rights against discrimination of any kind. It is perhaps in line with this realization, and in consonance with the current global trend of equality of all, irrespective of gender that Nigerian courts have risen to their responsibility in mitigating the injustice occasioned by this customary practice. This paper highlights and discusses the unjust customary practice of disinheriting the female gender, which is a derogation of the fundamental right against discrimination guaranteed by the constitution. The paper also examines the effort of the courts in mitigating the obvious injustice occasioned by the practice and makes suggestions for a more effective legal regime.
Keywords
Mitigating, injustice, customary law, inheritance by women, igbos, nigeria- State Police an Imperative for True Federalism in Nigeria
Authors
Source
International Journal of Innovative Research and Development, Vol 4, No 11 (2015), Pagination:Abstract
The centralized structure of the police under the 1999 Constitution of Nigeria vis a vis the constitutional provision on Nigerian federalism appear to be a contradiction in terms. Such symbol of unitary government as a central police force under the Nigerian democracy has been a subject of heated debate particularly since the inception of the current democratic dispensation in 1999, among those who insist that the practice of proper federalism is crucial for Nigeria’s democratization process. This paper examines the need for the establishment of state police. A central factor in federalism is the relative autonomy enjoyed by the states in relation to the central government, but without its independent police a state cannot claim autonomy for the police is the coercive force on which a government stands. There is need for the establishment of state police as one of the key factors in enthroning true federalism in Nigeria whose practice of federalism is rocked with several abnormalities. The paper analyses the provisions of the 1999 Constitution of the Federal Republic of Nigeria, the Nigerian federal practices, the opinions of the stakeholders in the affairs of government, as well as the view of the common man on the subject of discuss. For an effective practice of federalism, each unit of the government needs its own independent security system which is represented by the police to effectively run the affairs of government.