Résultats 58 ressources
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Depuis le troc muet entre Carthaginois et Africains qu’Hérodote d’ Halicarnasse appelait « commerce muet » cet échange entre les deux parties est fondé sur la confiance sans aucun contact physique entre eux. Pierre angulaire de toute relation d’échange, le concept de confiance a depuis longtemps attiré l’engouement des chercheurs. Sur le web, la question de la confiance se pose aves plus de sensibilité. En effet, les problèmes de fraude auxquels s’ajoute le caractère distant du commerce électronique, le manque de familiarité avec ce type d’échange ainsi que l’insécurité réelle du réseau, découragent beaucoup de consommateur à acheter via ce canal de distribution. Les vendeurs en ligne gagneraient à réfléchir donc sur les moyens susceptibles de dissiper les craintes qui tournent autour du e-commerce et d’instaurer la confiance vis-à-vis de leurs sites dans le but de promouvoir les ventes. Ce travail de recherche s’inscrit dans le cadre général d’une meilleure compréhension du comportement d’achat en ligne, nous proposons d’étudier la relation entre «confiance» et «intention d’achat en ligne» et nous allons nous intéresser particulièrement à la sécurité de transaction comme antécédent de la confiance électronique.
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Until recently, doing business in developing countries, and in Sub-Saharan Africa in particular, was associated with high risk. Although each investment decision is associated with some risk, there are always obligations incumbent on host States in that regard. However, when domestic law is too obsolete to match the requirements of an evolving investment and commercial environment which it is supposed to regulate, and when its effects are unpredictable, one of the fundamental conditions for attracting investment goes missing. This eventually underscores the need for a legal reform. The phenomenon of 'globalisation' on the one hand, and the need for (developing) countries to integrate their economies into the global market, on the other hand, considerably accentuated the postulate of development through law.Against this background, some African countries, at the dawn of the 1990s, felt a need to 'modernise' their legal systems for the major part inherited from colonialism. In this vein, they entrusted a supranational organ, the OHADA, to perform that legal reform. This paper is an attempt to test the OHADA against the discourse of law as a development engine. Furthermore, this is an assessment of the extent to which OHADA, as a legal tool, could be useful in serving the purpose of regional integration and economic growth in Africa.
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The promotion of international trade is seen as one of the important instruments to ensure development in developing nations and regions. The history of the World Trade Organisation (WTO) and the drafting of many regional and similar international trade agreements are evidence of this. The Southern African Development Community (SADC) is no exception.1 It is therefore strange that many states that are members of the WTO and actively encourage the opening up of international borders to free trade do not include public procurement2 in such free trade arrangements. This is particularly evident in developing states. If the WTO Government Procurement Agreement (GPA), which is a plurilateral agreement, is considered it is clear that many states do not wish to open their internal markets to competition in the public procurement sphere. It is therefore not surprising that public procurement has been described as the last rampart of state protectionism (Ky, 2012). Public procurement is an important segment of trade in any country (Arrowsmith & Davies, 1998). It is estimated that public procurement represents between 10% and 15% of the gross domestic product (GDP) of developed countries and up to 25% of GDP in developing states (Wittig, 1999). Unfortunately, governments often expect private industry to open up national markets for international competition but do not lead the way. Except for the limited use of pooled procurement,3 no specific provision is at present made for the harmonisation and integration of public procurement in the SADC. In view of the proximity of the member states, the interdependency of their economies and the benefits that can be derived from opening up their boundaries to regional competition in public procurement, the possibility of harmonisation and deeper integration in this sphere needs to be given more attention. The importance of public procurement in international trade and regional integration is twofold: first, it forms a substantial part of trade with the related economic and developmental implications; secondly, it is used by governments as an instrument to address socio-economic issues. Public procurement spending is also important because of its potential influence on human rights, including aspects such as the alleviation of poverty, the achievement of acceptable labour standards and environmental goals, and similar issues (McCrudden, 1999). In this article the need to harmonise public procurement in the SADC in order to open up public procurement to regional competition, some of the obstacles preventing this, and possible solutions are discussed. Reference is made to international instruments such as the United Nations Commission on International Trade Law (UNCITRAL), the Model Law on Public Procurement and the GPA. In particular, the progress made in the Common Market for Eastern and Southern Africa (COMESA) with regard to the harmonisation of public procurement, which was based on the Model Law, will be used to suggest possible solutions to the problem of harmonising public procurement in the SADC.
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The Southern Africa Development Community (SADC), the African Union (AU) and other African regional economic communities (RECs) have as their ultimate objective the political and economic integration of the African continent. The SADC is home to a number of countries, all of them striving to improve their investment climate to attract foreign investors by reducing the costs of doing business in the region. One way of achieving this is by setting targets for and speeding up political and economic integration, improving interconnectivity and thereby enlarging the market size and enhancing its attractiveness. The SADC region still suffers from high levels of energy poverty through low access levels in all countries except South Africa and Mauritius. Numerous studies have shown that greater regional trading and cooperation on power development within the SADC could substantially reduce investment and operational costs as well as carbon emissions. The need for a regional power trading pool and regional cooperation grew out of the power utilities’ recognition of the vulnerability of individual countries if each continued to pursue a policy of self-sufficiency rather than out of a desire to minimise the social or financial costs of the region’s power. The power sector in southern Africa is undergoing tremendous reforms, more especially since the establishment of the Southern African Power Pool (SAPP) in August 1995. The SADC, however, faces serious challenges that include diminishing surplus generation capacity and the need to ensure that SADC citizens have equitable access to electricity at affordable prices. To meet these challenges, treaties and protocols have been adopted but are failing to deliver at the implementation stage. This article reviews the SADC energy-electricity regulatory framework in the context of economic and political integration and recommends the establishment of an independent regional regulatory authority to oversee the implementation of integrated holistic energy and air pollution control and prevention, and a common climate change policy. Such a regulator would be a highly resourced regional institution that will liaise with international institutions. This independent regional authority will serve as a catalyst for regional economic integration. It will also have a mandate to introduce and coordinate the establishment of an SADC regional emissions trading scheme that will contribute to managing the mitigation of greenhouse gases (GHGs) and the implementation of global warming adaptation strategies in the region.
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La cyberjustice a révolutionné le système judiciaire dans les pays avancés permettant un accès à la justice de plus en plus probante. Mais quelle peut être sa plus-value en Afrique où le service public de la justice s'est dégradé depuis une décennie du fait des restrictions budgétaires ? Même si les obstacles auxquels se trouvent confronter l'appareil judiciaire et les justiciables ne sont pas négligeables, l'Afrique, qui aujourd‟hui apparaît comme le continent d‟avenir, gagnerait à dépasser ces obstacles en mettant la technologie au service de la justice. C'est ainsi que ce continent parviendra à une justice plus efficace en étant moins lente et plus impartiale entre autres.
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Thématiques
- Droit communautaire, harmonisation, intégration (6)
- Arbitrage, médiation, conciliation (4)
- Droit commercial, droit des affaires (3)
- Droit financier, économique, bancaire (3)
- Responsabilité sociétale des entreprises (3)
- Commerce électronique (2)
- Commerce international (2)
- Droit civil (2)
- Droit des coopératives (2)
- Droit des sociétés commerciales (2)
- Droit des sûretés (2)
- Propriété intellectuelle, industrielle (2)
- Droit des assurances (1)
- Droit du travail & sécurité sociale (1)
- Procédures collectives (1)
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