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A configuration of trade regimes in Eastern and Southern Africa region: Implication for deeper integration and WTO compatibility

This work has examined the implication the proliferation of identical econOITllC groupings portends for the east and southern Africa region. The thrust of the study here has been to interface and interrogate the incidence of the configuration of integration regimes in the east and southern Africa re...

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Main Author: Busieka, Wycliffe M
Other Authors: Kalula, Evance
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Department of Commercial Law 2023
Subjects:
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access_status_str Open Access
author Busieka, Wycliffe M
author2 Kalula, Evance
author_browse Busieka, Wycliffe M
Kalula, Evance
author_facet Kalula, Evance
Busieka, Wycliffe M
author_sort Busieka, Wycliffe M
collection Thesis
description This work has examined the implication the proliferation of identical econOITllC groupings portends for the east and southern Africa region. The thrust of the study here has been to interface and interrogate the incidence of the configuration of integration regimes in the east and southern Africa region. The work has investigated the question as to whether the proliferation of trade regimes has prepared a fertile ground for greater and deeper integration in the region. The thesis has also interrogated the proposition that such proliferation is the very antithesis of the desired goal to promote trade harmonization and reach out for deeper integration in the region. Importantly this work has ventured to query the confluence of identical trade regimes in view of the compatibility imperative as enshrined in the wro legal framework. We have examined the implication this configuration of integration regimes portends for the wro disciplines. This work conunenced with an extensive examination of current works on regional integration regimes in general and integration initiatives within the east and southern Africa region in particular. The interrogation exercise was premised on works, both economic surveys and legal treatises undertaken on the recently concluded EU-SA free trade agreement, the SADC Trade Protocol, the COMESA Treaty and the Cotonou Agreement. The actual texts of these instruments form the bulk of the sources. We note that without exceptlon, significant and to that extent costly restructuring programs will have to be undertaken by States in the east and southern Africa region in response to the disruptive EU-SA trade partnership. We have established that these integration regime scores well on the imperative of wro compatibility. We gather that the present wro structures are not malleable enough for the cash strapped sub-Saharan Africa trade regimes to reconfigure themselves in such a way as to deepen the integration agenda. We have urged for more flexibility in the wro framework on this score to augment integration processes currently crowding the regional landscape. Mataywa W Busieka - 10th July, 2003
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38354
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:33:26.520Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2023
publishDateRange 2023
publishDateSort 2023
publisher Department of Commercial Law
publisherStr Department of Commercial Law
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/38354 A configuration of trade regimes in Eastern and Southern Africa region: Implication for deeper integration and WTO compatibility Busieka, Wycliffe M Kalula, Evance Commercial Law This work has examined the implication the proliferation of identical econOITllC groupings portends for the east and southern Africa region. The thrust of the study here has been to interface and interrogate the incidence of the configuration of integration regimes in the east and southern Africa region. The work has investigated the question as to whether the proliferation of trade regimes has prepared a fertile ground for greater and deeper integration in the region. The thesis has also interrogated the proposition that such proliferation is the very antithesis of the desired goal to promote trade harmonization and reach out for deeper integration in the region. Importantly this work has ventured to query the confluence of identical trade regimes in view of the compatibility imperative as enshrined in the wro legal framework. We have examined the implication this configuration of integration regimes portends for the wro disciplines. This work conunenced with an extensive examination of current works on regional integration regimes in general and integration initiatives within the east and southern Africa region in particular. The interrogation exercise was premised on works, both economic surveys and legal treatises undertaken on the recently concluded EU-SA free trade agreement, the SADC Trade Protocol, the COMESA Treaty and the Cotonou Agreement. The actual texts of these instruments form the bulk of the sources. We note that without exceptlon, significant and to that extent costly restructuring programs will have to be undertaken by States in the east and southern Africa region in response to the disruptive EU-SA trade partnership. We have established that these integration regime scores well on the imperative of wro compatibility. We gather that the present wro structures are not malleable enough for the cash strapped sub-Saharan Africa trade regimes to reconfigure themselves in such a way as to deepen the integration agenda. We have urged for more flexibility in the wro framework on this score to augment integration processes currently crowding the regional landscape. Mataywa W Busieka - 10th July, 2003 2023-09-04T08:05:43Z 2023-09-04T08:05:43Z 2003 2023-09-04T08:05:20Z Doctoral Thesis Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38354 eng application/pdf Department of Commercial Law Faculty of Law
spellingShingle Commercial Law
Busieka, Wycliffe M
A configuration of trade regimes in Eastern and Southern Africa region: Implication for deeper integration and WTO compatibility
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title A configuration of trade regimes in Eastern and Southern Africa region: Implication for deeper integration and WTO compatibility
title_full A configuration of trade regimes in Eastern and Southern Africa region: Implication for deeper integration and WTO compatibility
title_fullStr A configuration of trade regimes in Eastern and Southern Africa region: Implication for deeper integration and WTO compatibility
title_full_unstemmed A configuration of trade regimes in Eastern and Southern Africa region: Implication for deeper integration and WTO compatibility
title_short A configuration of trade regimes in Eastern and Southern Africa region: Implication for deeper integration and WTO compatibility
title_sort configuration of trade regimes in eastern and southern africa region implication for deeper integration and wto compatibility
topic Commercial Law
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/38354
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