All Stories

  1. Editors’ Note
  2. Introduction: COVID-19 and the Law in Africa
  3. Emergency Procurement and Responses to COVID-19 in Africa: The Contrasting Cases of South Africa and Nigeria
  4. The implications of negotiated settlements for debarment in public procurement: a preliminary enquiry
  5. Human rights in the context of public procurements financed by the World Bank
  6. Editors’ Note
  7. The Use of Country Systems
  8. The World Bank’s Procurement Framework: An Assessment of Aid Effectiveness
  9. Public Procurement, Corruption and Blockchain Technology in South Africa: A Preliminary Legal Inquiry
  10. The Implications of Negotiated Settlements on Debarment in Public Procurement: A Preliminary Inquiry
  11. Systemic corruption and public procurement in developing countries: are there any solutions?
  12. Citizens’ Response to Irresponsible (or Constrained) Leadership as a Catalyst for Change: A Critical Assessment of Leadership and Followership in Nigeria
  13. A Comparative Analysis of the Nigerian Public Procurement Act Against International Best Practice
  14. THE CHANGES TO THE WORLD BANK’S PROCUREMENT POLICY AND THE IMPLICATIONS FOR AFRICAN BORROWERS
  15. The World Bank's Influence on Procurement Reform in Africa
  16. III. THE BAE/SAUDI AL-YAMAMAH CONTRACTS: IMPLICATIONS IN LAW AND PUBLIC PROCUREMENT
  17. The Use of Exclusions for Corruption in Developing Country Procurement: The Case of South Africa
  18. Perspectives in International Economic Law. Edited by Asif H Qureshi [The Hague: Kluwer Law International, 2002. xii + 338 pp. ISBN 90-411-9866-0]
  19. A perspective on corruption and public procurement in Africa
  20. Coordinating public procurement to support EU objectives – a first step? The case of exclusions for serious criminal offences