Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa, The
Professor FT Abioye (LLB LLM LLD) (Chief Editor); Dr DT Mailula (B Proc LLB LLM LLD); Professor HCAW Schulze (Assessor Dr jur); Ms T Botha (BA Journ BA (Hons) MA)
ISSN: 2522-3062
Year: 2017 – 2018
Published: Tri-annually
Category: Juta’s Law Journals
About this publication
The journal is published three times a year (March, July, November). An important regular feature in each issue of CILSA is the review of current legal developments in Lesotho, Namibia, South Africa, Swaziland, Zambia and Zimbabwe. This is the only internationally available, regular update of legal developments in these countries.
CILSA is a peer-reviewed academic publication and is the recognized South African law journal with a wide international circulation and welcomes contributions from non-South African academics.
Abstracts
Volume / Issue
Volume 50 Issue 3, 2017
The recent global financial crisis: delinking security-protectionism and relinking fraudulent misrepresentation in MNCs and the global market-contending existing issues in international law and international relations
Authors: Brian Ikejiaku
Source: Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa, The, pp 442 – 467 (2017)
New directions by the Panel in Russia-Commercial Vehicles and the implications for South African anti-dumping investigations
Authors: Gustav Brink
Source: Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa, The, pp 417 – 441 (2017)
Access to international justice in Africa: the conundrum of states’ non-compliance with judicial decisions
Authors: Swikani Ncube
Source: Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa, The, pp 395 – 416 (2017)
Harmonising or unifying the law applicable to international sales contracts between the BRICS states
Authors: Marlene Wethmar-Lemmer
Source: Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa, The, pp 372 – 394 (2017)
Domesticating the World Trade Organisation’s Trade-Related Aspects of Intellectual Property Rights (TRIPS) flexibilities to access essential medicines: Any lessons for the SADC from Botswana?
Authors: Lonias Ndlovu
Source: Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa, The, pp 347 – 371 (2017)
Credit bureaus in South Africa and Namibia: A comparative analysis of the regulatory frameworks evaluated against the World Bank’s principles for credit reporting-Part II
Authors: André Boraine, Jani van Wyk
Source: Comparative and International Law Journal of Southern Africa, The, pp 303 – 346 (2017)