Résultats 68 ressources
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The paper examines the impact of corona-virus pandemic on women in Nigeria. Emergencies and times of unrest have been linked with increasing reports of Gender Based Violence. Pandemics and Epidemics on the other hand are no exception. The COVID-19 pandemic has been associated with an increase in Gender Based Violence termed the Shadow Pandemic due to the control measures adopted in containing the spread of the virus. The paper adopted the Social Ecological Model to explain and understand the factors that contribute to the increase of Gender Based Violence against women during emergencies or natural disasters and how interaction of individual and environmental factors influence behavior and attitudes that create an atmosphere that encourages violence. The paper was based on secondary sources of data. The findings of the paper revealed that the lockdown isolated women and attenuated opportunities for them to divulge the abuse or receive necessary support services or resources. The paper also discovered that there has been an increased rate of reported cases of Gender Based Violence during the months of lockdown in Nigeria. The paper concluded that the corona-virus outbreak has exposed the shadow pandemic of violence and inequality and the exclusion of the Minister of Women Affairs and Social Development is a step in the wrong direction . The paper recommended that it is pertinent to integrate gender lens into disease response and protection mechanism and Gender Based Violence services should be termed as essential duties during crisis and emergencies.
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How is the law measured? For long, it appeared that the law cannot be measured. While there are standards and processes, the law was not regarded as quantifiable. Only in the advent of recent technological advancements in law have there been considerations for metrics. These technologies sought to tackle the legal field’s inherent protectionism fueled by deep asymmetries in information. Consequently, the rise in legal ‘metrics’ stems from an access to justice perspective. The assumption is that in making the law more quantifiable, knowledge that has been historically opaque and inaccessible outside of the legal community may be revealed.Alternatively, it may be argued that the law has always been measurable. Words, through linguistic devices, have shaped legal meaning. In effect, the law conceivably has been measured by its words. In fact, “law exists as text” (Hildebrandt, 2015). I further this line of thinking by investigating natural language as the key vessel through which the law has manifested itself. Does the law depend on natural language to do its work? Importantly, is the language sufficient at housing legal norms?This dissertation seeks to tell a narrative. Broadly, it chronicles the story of law’s intimate relationship with language. But more specifically, the thesis details the law’s recent encounter with the digital. When law met technology, its relationship with language changed, invoking skepticism around its fitness for the conveyance of legal concepts. With the introduction of an innovative player – code – the law had perceivably found its new linguistic match. As a result, code was tested for its ability to perform and accommodate for the law’s demands. Ultimately, confronted by natural language and code, the law is asked whether code can be its language. Comment mesure-t-on le droit ? Longtemps, le droit semblait résister à la mesure. Bien qu'il existe des normes et des processus, le droit n'était pas considéré comme quantifiable. Ce n'est qu'avec l'avènement des récentes avancées technologiques dans le domaine du droit que l'on a commencé à envisager une telle quantification. Ces technologies ont cherché à s'attaquer au protectionnisme inhérent au domaine juridique, alimenté par de profondes asymétries d'information. Par conséquent, l'essor de la "métrique" juridique découle d'une perspective d'accès à la justice. L'hypothèse est qu'en rendant le droit plus quantifiable, des connaissances historiquement opaques et inaccessibles en dehors de la communauté juridique peuvent être révélées.On peut également faire valoir que le droit a toujours été mesurable. Les mots, par le biais de dispositifs linguistiques, ont façonné la signification juridique. En effet, il est concevable que le droit ait été mesuré par ses mots. En effet, "le droit existe en tant que texte" (Hildebrandt, 2015). J'approfondis cette ligne de pensée en examinant le langage naturel en tant que vecteur clé à travers lequel le droit s'est manifesté. La loi dépend-elle du langage naturel pour faire son travail ? Plus important encore, le langage est-il suffisant pour abriter les normes juridiques ?Cette thèse cherche à raconter une histoire. De manière générale, elle relate l'histoire de la relation intime du droit avec le langage. Mais plus spécifiquement, la thèse détaille la rencontre récente du droit avec le numérique. Lorsque le droit a rencontré la technologie, sa relation avec le langage a changé, suscitant le scepticisme quant à son aptitude à transmettre des concepts juridiques. Avec l'introduction d'un acteur innovant - le code - le droit a visiblement trouvé sa nouvelle adéquation linguistique. En conséquence, le code a été mis à l'épreuve quant à sa capacité à fonctionner et à répondre aux exigences du droit. Finalement, confronté au langage naturel et au code, le droit se demande si le code peut être son langage.
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Ces dernières années, la plupart des pays en développement sont confrontés à la nécessité de concilier deux impératifs : d’une part, une demande sociale forte qui nécessite un besoin de ressources publiques supplémentaires, et d’autre part le désarmement tarifaire consécutif aux politiques d’ouverture commerciale, qui les prive de la majeure partie de leurs recettes budgétaires. D’où l’impérieuse nécessité pour ces pays d’assurer une transition dans la structure de leur prélèvement public c’est à dire de transférer la pression fiscale du commerce extérieur vers la fiscalité domestique. Cette thèse s’intéresse à cette problématique et vise à étudier les conditions de réussite d’un tel phénomène dans les pays en développement au travers de quatre essais empiriques. Le premier essai concerne le rôle de la TVA et des droits d’accises dans une première vague de transition. La TVA étant un impôt neutre et à très large assiette fiscale, cette dernière a été suggérée comme outil majeur pour réussir le transfert des ressources publiques du cordon douanier vers la fiscalité domestique et en complémentarité avec les droits d’accises. Nos investigations empiriques soutiennent cette assertion théorique et montrent que le couple TVA-accise joue bien ce rôle de substitut aux recettes de porte en quasi baisse suite au démantèlement tarifaire dans les pays. Néanmoins le rôle d’appui de la TVA et des droits d’accises est limité à partir d’un certain seuil de baisse des recettes de porte, qui traduit aussi le fait que le potentiel de mobilisation fiscale par la TVA dans ces pays est limité et qu’il faudra s’en préoccuper. Dans le second essai nous analysons la transition de seconde génération basée sur les impôts directs (impôts sur les revenus et impôts fonciers). Nous trouvons que les impôts directs sont des outils pauvres de transition fiscale dans les pays en développement. Pourtant, nous trouvons que le développement financier est un médiateur certain et incontestable à une politique de transition fiscale de seconde génération basée sur les impôts directs, car permettant de recouper l’information sur les revenus des contribuables et de générer des traces documentaires à l’administration fiscale, qui permettent d’envisager une mise à fiscalisation des contribuables, gage de recettes fiscales directes supplémentaires dans les pays. Dans le troisième essai, nous nous intéressons à l’effet de la mise en place d’une réforme de transition fiscale sur l’efficience dans la collecte des recettes en menant une étude de cas pour l’union économique et monétaire ouest africaine (UEMOA). Nos résultats supportent l’affirmative, en ce sens que la réforme accroit globalement une mobilisation efficiente des recettes dans la zone UEMOA. Cette efficience entrainerait par ailleurs avec elle une amélioration du climat des affaires dans la zone, suite à la mise en place de cette réforme. Enfin nous terminons cette thèse par un quatrième essai qui interroge quand à lui les impacts distributifs et de pauvreté d’une réforme de transition fiscale basée sur la TVA. Quoique les résultats montrent une incidence régressive de la réforme sur le revenu des ménages, une redistribution par la dépense aurait le mérite d’atténuer l’incidence sociale de cette stratégie de réforme sur le revenu des contribuables.
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ENGLISH ABSTRACT: While electronic commerce in South Africa is still comparatively small, it is growing rapidly. The advent of the internet has potentially fundamental impacts on business and the law both locally and internationally. It is submitted the free competition on the internet is important and will continue to be so in the future. The research in this thesis relates to the rise of so-called internet monopolies (such as Google, Facebook and Amazon) and its implications for competition law enforcement. A particularly problematic aspect of the products provided by some of these companies is that their products and services are ostensibly free to consumers. This thesis examines whether the traditional model for the regulating abuse of dominance would be effective in the instance where such an internet monopoly is charged with a contravention under South African competition law. The research and analysis in the thesis are effectively divided into three parts. The first considers whether abuse of dominance related to the internet deserves closer analysis and also assesses the purposes of competition law and how these are changing (or should change) in the light of new technology and markets. The second part deals with abuse of dominance both generally and specifically in relation to the internet. In this context, the thesis considers how harms may manifest and how dominance may be determined in the context of the internet. The final part considers specific issues that may be problematic in light of the internet. The interrelationship between intellectual property and competition law is analysed, along with aspects pertaining to the assertion of jurisdiction, the nature of competition law enforcement and the extent to which different jurisdictions may (and/or should) cooperate in dealing with abuse of dominance on the internet. The thesis submits that the South African legislative framework for regulating abuse of dominance on the internet is broadly fit for purpose, but that there is a need for developing new approaches and policy within that framework. It contributes to the existing body of knowledge and discourse by providing a comprehensive overview of the regulatory framework in South Africa, informed by comparative analysis; by applying this in a new context (hitherto under-researched in the South African context), and by offering concrete suggestions to frame policy and approach.
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Du fait des changements profonds qu’apportent les nouveaux concepts sur lesquels se base le référentiel de l’IASB, le passage aux normes IFRS a été qualifié d’une révolution comptable. Le but d’harmonisation de cette institution se réalise à travers la diffusion mondiale progressive des normes IFRS. Toutefois, les entreprises de la zone OHADA sont concernées par ce changement. Compte tenu de la rareté des travaux de recherche dans le domaine, nous essayons d’analyser à travers ce papier, l’adoption de telles normes en contexte OHADA. Pour y parvenir, cet article rappelle le mécanisme de passage aux normes IFRS dans l’espace OHADA, étudie ensuite l’intérêt pour les entreprises de cette zone et enfin met en évidence les enjeux liés à un tel projet. Les principaux résultats montrent que loin d’être un simple outil de présentation et de communication de l’information financière, les IFRS constituent pour les entreprises de la zone OHADA, un levier d’attraction des investisseurs et d’intégration économique.
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Money laundering, the financing of terrorism and proliferation financing continue to be serious threats to the stability of the international financial system. The international community therefore has prioritised the fight against these activities. For example, international bodies such as the Financial Action Task Force (FATF) and others have developed standards and recommendations against which countries and organisations are measured in this regard. Against this background, this thesis investigates to what extent Botswana’s legislative framework regarding money laundering, terrorism financing and other illicit financial flows complies with international standards, especially the FATF Recommendations. The study sets the scene by defining and describing money laundering, financing of terrorism and proliferation financing, after which the current statutory framework in Botswana is discussed in detail. After subsequently setting out the various global and regional (specifically African) initiatives in the fight against money laundering and other financial crimes, the current state of affairs in Botswana is benchmarked against both the South African framework as well as the FATF Recommendations. The investigation is limited to a technical assessment (doctrinal analysis) of Botswana law to determine the current compliance (or lack thereof) of the country’s statutory provisions and to make recommendations regarding how the framework can be improved. It is difficult for some countries, especially African countries like Botswana, to comply fully with the FATF Recommendations, since compliance can be expensive and dependent on high levels of expertise on the part of the relevant authorities. Therefore, such more vulnerable countries tend to face a higher risk of being used as conduits for money laundering and related activities. Despite these and other challenges, Botswana has gone to great lengths to re-assess and improve its anti-money laundering and combating the financing of terrorism (AML/CFT) legislation with a view to move towards full compliance with the FATF Recommendations. Nevertheless, the evaluation indicates that there are some remaining shortcomings in Botswana’s legislation. Consequently, the thesis concludes by proffering certain recommendations towards ensuring that Botswana’s AML/CFT legislation is rendered fully compliant with the FATF Recommendations.
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The present thesis is concerned with a comparative study of contract law applicable in the BRICS countries Brazil, Russia, India, China and South Africa with a strong focus on the issues of invalidity of contracts and hardship. The purpose is to identify commonalities and divergences in these systems with different legal backgrounds, particularly the influence of civil law tradition in Brazil, Russia and China as opposed to common law in India, and the mixed system in South Africa. Among the identified divergences and challenges, the thesis purports to demonstrate that the obstacles are not insuperable and that there are rooms for the harmonisation and compatibility within the BRICS context with respect to the two selected topics of contract law. Even when full harmony is not reached, the research also purports to demonstrate that some countries may benefit from others divergent experiences. Detecting mutual contribution is of particular relevance to this group of countries, since they share the characteristic of being evolving systems which have undergone recent reforms in their legislation on contract law and may be more open to assess and incorporate more efficient contract practices.
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This chapter deals with the principle of direct effect as applied in European Union law and explores its suitability in the enforcement of African Union (AU) legal instruments, notably those setting up the African Continental Free Trade Area (AfCFTA). What motivates the issue of direct effect is the noted reticence of African countries to litigate trade matters between themselves despite the existence of provisions of regional trade treaties creating courts of justice which give standing to Member States. Therefore, it surveys the avenues through which natural and legal persons can uphold their rights stemming from AfCFTA treaties thus contributing to treaty interpretation and increasing security and predictability. Currently, the AfCFTA Dispute Settlement Protocol, modelled after the WTO, does not allow such a possibility, contrary to rights acquired by natural and legal persons before some African Regional Economic Communities (RECs) courts. Nevertheless, this chapter finds that carving out access of natural and legal persons to AfCFTA proceedings may not always work as intended since there are other ways to bypass these obstacles. These loopholes could be the gateway through which direct effect will develop and become a principle of AU law broadly speaking. These gaps further complement this chapter’s suggestions to explore amending the AfCFTA legal instruments, even though its dispute settlement system is yet to be tested, in order to match the standing that natural and legal persons have acquired under the RECs, which, in fine, are building blocs towards achieving the AfCFTA and, eventually, the African Economic Community.
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In the more recent decades, international investment law (“iil”) and arbitration have been going through a process of recalibration prompted by both the intensification of cross-border capital flows and the States’ growing concerns over the potential restraints iil may impose upon the pursuit of public interests. The present contribution will pay attention to a specific feature that can be observed within these developments, i.e. the role played by soft law in investment arbitration and, more generally, under iil, also with a view to assessing the impact on the formation of binding international law of instruments formally devoid of normative force within the international legal order. After an introduction (Section 1), the contribution is articulated into four sections. Section 2 will first define the field of investigation. The case law of investment tribunals and the treaty practice under the more recent iia s will be then explored as to the reliance on soft law instruments for the purposes of settling procedural (Section 3) and substantive issues (Section 4). Some final remarks will close (Section 5).
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Recently, commercial activities in the state of Cameroon are evolving and there is an inflow of investors from within the OHADA Zone and other regions of the world to Cameroon. This has led to the proliferation of commercial contracts such as concession contracts, production sharing agreements, risk contracts between the Republic of Cameroon and foreign investors, or contracts between individuals of foreign countries as well as with Cameroonian nationals. Commonly, contracts may be breached and disagreements surface among the contracting parties. The difficulties pose is in the manner to settle such disagreements in a friendly manner to maintain the relationship between the parties and to enables the contracting parties to resolve the disputes more cost-effectively and increase business efficiency in Cameroon. However, the state of Cameroon has a favorable attitude towards bilateral and multilateral investment treaties to guarantee protection to investors in the territory. This elucidates the reason why the government of Cameroon has enacted laws and ratified regional and international treaties, aimed at safeguarding a smooth atmosphere for investors and other commercial traders particularly in the domain of arbitration to help in resolving disputes in case of any disagreement among contracting parties. This article will present the authorities involved in arbitration with the experience regarding the application of the various law and institutions concerned with the arbitration. This will also help contracting parties or investors to understand the legal mechanisms in the settlement of disputes through arbitration in Cameroon.
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This thesis addresses two aspects of financial constraints focusing, firstly, on the impact of financial constraints on firm performance and, secondly, on the impact of dual-class share structure on financial constraints. The first issue has been addressed in a large number of research studies, but the results are mixed. This study, therefore, conducts a meta-analysis of those earlier studies to provide a summary view of the results which, in contrast to narrative reviews of the empirical literature, provides an objective overview. The second issue examines the impact of dual-class share structures on financial constraints. The period of the global financial crisis is used to test the impact of the state of the economy on that relationship. To examine the impact of financial constraints on firm performance, 26 empirical studies with 189 effect sizes representing listed firms have been analysed. The study finds that overall there is a positive relationship between financial constraints and firm performance. The study also shows that the set of market-based measures of firm performance has a significant negative impact on the relationship, compared with the set of accounting-based measures. In terms of the financial constraints measure, the set of external financial constraints measures have a positive and highly significant impact on the relationship. The meta-regression analysis suggests that the choice of measure, regional difference, journal quality and publication status all have a significant impact on the relationship, and explain the variation in the association. To examine the impact of dual-class share structures on financial constraints the study analyses a sample of non-financial US firms over the period 2002-2018. Share structure is measured by the existence of a dual-class structure and also by excess voting rights and the proximity of the superior class shareholders in such structures. The study also shows that if financial constraints are measured by the WW index, irrespective of how dual-class share structure is measured, it increases the level of financial constraints. Similar results are obtained where financial constraints are measured by the KZ and SA indexes, except where dual-class share structure is measured by the proximity of superior class shareholders. The study also finds that if financial constraints are measured by the WW index, dual-class had a reduced impact during the period of the global financial crisis, thus, providing support for the propping theory. However, if financial constraint is measured by the SA index, dual-class share structure appears to have an increased impact during the GFC years. Among the additional tests, the HM index has been used as a measure of financial constraints, and the findings show that the impact of dual-class structures on financial constraints appears to be driven by their effect on debt constraints. The study also shows that firm age moderates the impact of dual-class share structures if financial constraints are measured by the WW index. The KZ, WW, and SA indexes are based on firm characteristics and, therefore, the study also tests for an impact of dual-class structures when financial constraint is measured by a text-based index, the BLM index. However, the results do not provide evidence of an impact in that case.
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The mediation process is the parties' will to the dispute to reach an amicable, non-binding settlement to end their dispute. The Egyptian legislature adopted the idea of issuing a draft law on mediation in civil and commercial matters to settle disputes between the parties, whether before the litigation stage or after appearing before the courts. The Egyptian Ministry of Justice held many community dialogue sessions to find the final version of the draft law. However, the concerned authorities have not issued the law until writing this paper. This research aims to compare and analyze the Egyptian mediation procedures and the British mediation procedures to improve, develop, and enhance the Egyptian ones especially the draft law as well as overcoming the obstacles that hinder the spread of mediation. On the one hand, presenting the Egyptian procedures in the draft mediation law and the rules of the Cairo Regional Center for International Commercial Arbitration, CRCICA. On the other hand, the British procedures represented in the Institute of Civil Engineers' mediation rules, ICE.
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This collection explores the relevance of global trade law for data, big data and cross-border data flows. Contributing authors from different disciplines including law, economics and political science analyze developments at the World Trade Organization and in preferential trade venues by asking what future-oriented models for data governance are available and viable in the area of trade law and policy. The collection paints the broad picture of the interaction between digital technologies and trade regulation as well as provides in-depth analyses of critical to the data-driven economy issues, such as privacy and AI, and different countries' perspectives. This title is also available as Open Access on Cambridge Core.
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The nexus between climate-related risks and financial risk. From nuclear to climate apocalypse. The turning point: Paris agreement and UN 2030 agenda for sustainable development. The VUCA world. The European Union as pioneer of ESG revolution. Climate-related risks in the banking sector. The EBA framework of ESG risk for financial institutions. The principles for responsible banking. Environmental-related risk assessment. The mispricing of the environmental-related risks. The environmental-related disclosure as a risk mitigation tool. How do UniCredit assess, monitor and mitigate climaterelated risks. UniCredit’s financial risk management framework. Comparison with KPMG benchmark.
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The UNCITRAL Model Law on International Commercial Arbitration provides for the extension of the mandate of the arbitral tribunal post issuance of the final award for the issuance of correction, interpretation, additional award, and remittance of the award back to the arbitral tribunal to remove grounds for challenging the award. Using a doctrinal approach, this paper examines the deviations of the national laws of adopting jurisdictions from the Model Law in regards to this extended mandate, and evaluates the improvements and drawbacks in these deviations. Mainly, the findings of this paper are that, of the many deviations, the positive changes are those that provide comfortable and lenient default provisions for the benefit of inexperienced parties, and since correction, interpretation, additional award, and remittance are useful provisions that are designed to help self-rectify the arbitral process, without adversely delaying it, then the changes that increase the efficacy of these provisions are welcomed. On the other hand, unnecessary deviations are seen as drawbacks that hinder the harmonization of national arbitration laws aimed at by the Model Law. The adopting jurisdictions shall be limited to those acknowledged as such by the UNCITRAL.
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This thesis examines the value relevance of accounting information under integrated reporting (IR) in a comparative mandatory and voluntary setting. A meta review is conducted of all published work focusing on integrated reporting since 2011, which provides detailed insight into the gaps in the IR literature. Multiplicative log-linear model is used in measurement, which is a novel technique that mitigates the shortcomings of traditional value relevance models. The findings show that value relevance of summary accounting information increases after the implementation of IR in the mandatory setting. In the voluntary setting, market effect and the existing reporting paradigm effect the value relevance of accounting information under IR. If the market is large and existing reporting requirements are robust voluntary adoption of IR has minimal to no effect. However, in smaller markets with less rigorous reporting environment, adoption of IR does result in increased value relevance of accounting information. Compared to traditional models, the multiplicative model provides estimates that are more stable over time and shows better explanatory power. Overall, the findings of this thesis show that capital providers value the information content of IR under specific circumstances. This thesis contributes to the IR and value relevance literature by providing the first comparative cross-country evidence of the effect of IR in the change in value relevance of reported accounting information. It provides policy relevant input to the standard setters of IR by demonstrating the effect of IR in the decision usefulness of summary accounting information. The thesis further provides robust evidence of the efficacy of using the multiplicative log-linear model in measuring value relevance instead of the traditional linear additive models.
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The States, international organizations and interest groups are increasingly concerned with treaty claims of foreign investors, who sometimes seek compensation for the States' legitimate regulatory measures, such as tobacco plain packaging, nuclear energy phase out and environmental regulations. International investment law has yet to develop a comprehensive and predictable framework addressing some of the basis questions related to compensability of legitimate regulatory measures. The thesis carries out a comparative legal analysis to identify the key features of the prohibition of uncompensated expropriation as a general principle of law, and explores the rationale of that principle in political philosophy. Equipped with the results of this analysis, it proceeds to propose an analytical approach addressing practical questions related to the compensatory protection of foreign investments.
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This paper analyzes the protection of Foreign Direct Investments in the OHADA area, specifically, its regulation by the Treaty of Organization and Harmonization in Africa of Business Law (OHADA Treaty). It is to restore legal and judicial security within their scope that OHADA member countries have undertaken to harmonize and unify their economic sector legislation to attract foreign investment as a factor in economic development. Several national and international legal instruments are responsible for the protection of foreign direct investment in OHADA countries. Indeed, the volume of foreign direct investment (FDI) to developing countries increased considerably during the 1990s; As Africa is now one of the favorite destinations for Western and even African investors, it is becoming a very profitable continent for investors. However, the issue of regulating or securing foreign investment in African countries is still flawed. The establishment of OHADA, in a way, is in the same direction; if we stick to the purpose of the organization prescribed in paragraph 5 of the preamble to the OHADA Treaty, which states that the purpose of the OHADA law is to "promote the growth of economic activity and encourage investment." Unfortunately, this objective remains only an announcement of the preamble to the Treaty, because of the definition of business law given by Article 2 of that treaty. However, the list of subjects is not exhaustive, investment remains absent. Thus, foreign investment is not regulated by the OHADA Treaty, so even investment-related activities are held by other subjects (corporate law, commercial law, and security law). The omission of FDI in the scope of the OHADA Treaty leads us to raise the question of its regulation.This work proposes a reflection that the OHADA Treaty should be modernized through reform including investment and many other issues to deal effectively with the issue of foreign investment given the ineffectiveness of national and sub-regional instruments in this area.
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