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Freedom of Assembly in Zimbabwe

African Journal of Legal Studies, 2023
Abstract The past two decades have witnessed a protracted struggle for human rights in Zimbabwe. The adoption of the new constitution in 2013 provided a glimmer of hope for a new constitutional dispensation founded on a human rights culture. To this end, the Constitutional Court duly adopted a rights-based adjudication.
Simbarashe Tembo, Annie Singh
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Freedom to Assemble and the Freedom of Association

SSRN Electronic Journal, 2015
The Constitution of India provides for freedom to assemble and the freedom to associate. Article 19 (1)(b) provides that all citizens shall have the right to assemble peaceably and without arms. While Article 19 (1)(c) accords all citizens the right to form associations or unions or cooperative societies.
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21. Freedom of Assembly

2020
This chapter is concerned with the right to freedom of assembly and, in particular, the right to protest. The chapter begins with a discussion of the importance of the right to protest, and then considers the prohibition of certain types of behaviour, statutory powers to regulate protests, and common law powers to regulate protests.
Mark Elliott, Robert Thomas
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Freedom of Assembly

1995
Abstract ‘Moral panics’ and ‘folk devils’ became part of popular academic vernacular in the early 1970s and the frequency of their deployment has not waned since. A current, but quintessential, example of the genre is that which surrounds ‘law and order’ in the United Kingdom. This particular moral panic started with a creeping unease in
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Freedom of Assembly

2000
Abstract David Williams was one of the first legal scholars in this country to take a serious interest in civil liberties law. In Keeping the Peace, published in 1967, he discussed the peace-keeping powers of the police and administrative authorities within the context of the freedom to hold meetings and to engage in lawful protest ...
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20. Freedom of Assembly

2014
This chapter is concerned with the right to freedom of assembly and, in particular, the right to protest. The chapter begins with a discussion of the importance of the right to protest, and then considers the prohibition of certain types of behaviour, statutory powers to regulate protests, and common law powers to regulate protests.
Mark Elliott, Robert Thomas
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Freedom of Assembly

2022
Clément Nyaletsossi Voule   +1 more
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