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1 Ind. J. Const. Design 1 (2016)

handle is hein.journals/indjcstd1 and id is 1 raw text is: 




Page 1 of 28


           The  Voice of the People: Public Participation in the African Continent
                                 by Rafael Macia  Briedis*


                                        ABSTRACT

       Public  participation  is  becoming   a   more   common characteristic of
       constitutional drafting processes around the world, and Africa has not been an
       exception  in this regard. This paper  seeks to survey several of the public
       participation processes undertaken in a number of African nations, in order to
       examine  the methods followed and the effects produced by such processes. For
       that purpose, I have analyzed the constitutional drafting efforts in South Africa,
       Uganda,  Eritrea, Zimbabwe,  Rwanda,  Kenya,  and Egypt. These processes  all
       show  different circumstances and approaches, with variations in terms of their
       top-down   or  bottom-up  nature, and,  more   importantly, in terms  of the
       genuineness  behind the attempt to educate and consult the public.




Introduction

There has been a growing  trend, especially in recent years, to consider public participation an
essential aspect of constitutional enactment. Indeed, involvement of the citizenry in the creation
of a constitution is often seen as a legitimizing component of the drafting process, and as
fostering public understanding of and support for the process itself. This understanding and
support is in turn thought to be transmitted to the ensuing product (the constitution).' Not
everyone agrees with this assessment, though. Some scholars argue that public participation in
the design of a constitution may lead to social instability by generating a fight over resources
and by bringing forth latent conflictive ethnic identities. Additionally, they contend that public
participation will lead to constitutions based on personal, rather than communal, interests, and
that it will generate incoherent documents due to lack of agreement. Finally, they argue that
public participation does not guarantee  that citizens will feel sufficiently incentivized to
meaningfully participate.2

The purpose of the present paper is not to resolve the dispute between supporters and detractors
of public participation, but rather to provide a comparative review of public participation in
different constitutional drafting processes undertaken in the African continent, so that readers
may  reach their own conclusions. This work was originally intended as a background research

* JD/PhD Candidate at Indiana University Maurer School of Law, and Managing Affiliate at the Center for
Constitutional Democracy.
1 See Zachary Elkins et al., The Citizen as Founder: Public Participation in Constitutional Approval, 81 TEMP.
L. REV. 361, 362-63, 370 (2008).
2 See, e.g., id. at 374 (summarizing some of the skeptical views regarding public participation).

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