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The Unchecked Text: Unmasking the Zimbabwe Constitution

Par : Bloom Tizora
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  • FormatePub
  • ISBN8232531928
  • EAN9798232531928
  • Date de parution16/11/2025
  • Protection num.pas de protection
  • Infos supplémentairesepub
  • ÉditeurHamza elmir

Résumé

The year 2013 was meant to mark a decisive break with Zimbabwe's past. The new Constitution, forged from multi-party consensus and widespread public consultation, was hailed as a covenant-a document that would forever subject the power of the Executive to the Rule of Law. It promised devolution, accountability, and a comprehensive Bill of Rights. This supreme law was meant to be the master key to unlocking a democratic future.
This book, "The Unchecked Text: Unmasking the Zimbabwe Constitution, " argues that this promise has been systematically betrayed. What began as a foundation for democracy has been subtly transformed into the primary tool for entrenchment. We contend that the Constitution has been deliberately left "unchecked, " its strong language rendered inert by the political forces it was designed to restrain.
Our analysis dissects this systemic failure. We show how the language of hope-particularly the progressive socio-economic rights-has been deliberately undermined by legislative inaction (Chapter 4), and how the political opposition has been neutralized by the failure to reform key institutions like the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) and implement true devolution (Chapters 6 and 7). The central focus is the architecture of political survival.
Chapters 8 and 9 detail the institutional capture that has secured unchecked power. We reveal how Constitutional Amendment No. 2 gutted Judicial Independence, making the courts susceptible to executive influence, and how rampant economic capture and state patronage-the machinery of corruption-is financially necessary to sustain the ruling elite's political survival. The text, though lofty in its ideals, is functionally nullified by these structures of control.
Finally, we confront the most immediate threat in Chapter 10: the systematic effort to remove the presidential term limit. This move represents the final, open acknowledgment that the supreme law of the land is merely a disposable vehicle for consolidating power, not a permanent contract with the people. This book is a vital resource for scholars, activists, legal practitioners, and citizens who seek to understand the true legal scaffolding of power in modern Zimbabwe.
To dismantle the architecture of political entrenchment, we must first unmask the unchecked text and reclaim its intended purpose.
The year 2013 was meant to mark a decisive break with Zimbabwe's past. The new Constitution, forged from multi-party consensus and widespread public consultation, was hailed as a covenant-a document that would forever subject the power of the Executive to the Rule of Law. It promised devolution, accountability, and a comprehensive Bill of Rights. This supreme law was meant to be the master key to unlocking a democratic future.
This book, "The Unchecked Text: Unmasking the Zimbabwe Constitution, " argues that this promise has been systematically betrayed. What began as a foundation for democracy has been subtly transformed into the primary tool for entrenchment. We contend that the Constitution has been deliberately left "unchecked, " its strong language rendered inert by the political forces it was designed to restrain.
Our analysis dissects this systemic failure. We show how the language of hope-particularly the progressive socio-economic rights-has been deliberately undermined by legislative inaction (Chapter 4), and how the political opposition has been neutralized by the failure to reform key institutions like the Zimbabwe Electoral Commission (ZEC) and implement true devolution (Chapters 6 and 7). The central focus is the architecture of political survival.
Chapters 8 and 9 detail the institutional capture that has secured unchecked power. We reveal how Constitutional Amendment No. 2 gutted Judicial Independence, making the courts susceptible to executive influence, and how rampant economic capture and state patronage-the machinery of corruption-is financially necessary to sustain the ruling elite's political survival. The text, though lofty in its ideals, is functionally nullified by these structures of control.
Finally, we confront the most immediate threat in Chapter 10: the systematic effort to remove the presidential term limit. This move represents the final, open acknowledgment that the supreme law of the land is merely a disposable vehicle for consolidating power, not a permanent contract with the people. This book is a vital resource for scholars, activists, legal practitioners, and citizens who seek to understand the true legal scaffolding of power in modern Zimbabwe.
To dismantle the architecture of political entrenchment, we must first unmask the unchecked text and reclaim its intended purpose.
The Disciplined Glow
Bloom Tizora
E-book
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