Constitution making in South Sudan and Somalia: A tale of two transitional constitutions

By Stoyan Panov, 17 September 2014
©  WikiMedia (Jenny Rockett)
Salva Kiir Mayardit, President of South Sudan. © WikiMedia (Jenny Rockett)
<div class="span12 box"></div><div class="span12 box"></div><div class="span12 box"></div><div class="span12 box"></div><div class="span12 box"></div><div class="span12 box"></div><div class="smallest pull-right bottom5"><div class="alignright"></div></div><p>The veto power of the executive over legislation creates certain political and legal tensions in newly independent states or states which are sometimes labelled as failed states. The following entry examines the role of the executive in the constitutional provisions of South Sudan and Somalia, and the veto power in terms of its effect and relation to the rule of law in both countries.</p><p><strong>South Sudan</strong></p>
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