In this pioneer compilation of academic literature on the International Covenant on the Right to Development, including some of the leading experts on the subject, the authors delve at length into the central enquiry on how and to what extent the Covenant will, as a binding instrument of international law, shape the global balance of power. Envisaged to be incorporated in the international bill of human rights, the analysis on the various component elements leads to the conclusive argument that, once in force, the Covenant on the Right to Development will have major implications for how the international order is structured and how development is henceforth pursued.
Carol Chi Ngang (LLD, LLM, IDHA, SUSTLAW, LLB) is Associate Professor of Laws at National University of Lesotho, Research Fellow at University of the Free State, Guest Lecturer at University of Pretoria, UNDP Human Rights Chair for Lesotho and National Research Foundation of South Africa Category C2-Rated Researcher. He has published extensively including The Right to Development in Africa (Brill, 2021).
This book, being the first of its kind to analyze the International Covenant on the Right to Development, is especially relevant for legal researchers, while also having the potential to appeal to a broader audience, including policymakers and practitioners.