Flagship Event - 'Law and Politics in Three Courts' Conference
This conference spans two days, with the opening event, a Panel Discussion on African Jurisprudence, taking place on the evening of 7 Nov and a workshop taking place on 8 Nov.
The workshop brings together scholars studying the courts in Kenya, the United Kingdom, and the International Criminal Court. The seminars will focus on three cases in which law and politics have sharply intersected, and will consider the ways in which the judges have sought to meet the challenges that have been raised.
From the International Criminal Court, the seminar will focus on the Decision of the ICC Appeals Chamber in Jordan’s appeal against the decision under article 87(7)of the Rome Statute on the non-compliance by Jordan with the request by the Court for the arrest and surrender of Omar Al-Bashir (ICC-02/05-01/09 OA2) decided on 6 May 2019. The appeal is one of a series of ICC decisions concerning the immunity of sitting heads of state from arrest and surrender under the Rome Statute.
Turning to the Kenyan system, the 2017 presidential elections case (Raila Odinga and Another v IEBC and Others) will be analysed. This case offers one of the rare examples of a supreme court overturning the results of a presidential election and requiring fresh elections, within the narrow timeline required by the constitution. It raises questions about the role courts play in democracies, and particularly, their role in supervising elections.
Finally, from the UK system, R (Privacy International) v Investigatory Powers Tribunal law_and_politics_in_three_courts_call_for_applications_7th_and_8th.pdf