Reflecting on 25 years of the AU Constitutive Act

Unconstitutional changes of government

Authors

  • Donald Deya Pan African Lawyers Union

Keywords:

Constitutive Act of the African Union, unconstitutional changes of government, civilian coups, military coups, electoral justice, democratic governance, political courage

Abstract

This essay is a write-up of the oral reflections by Donald Deya on 25 years of the Constitutive Act of the African Union (AU), interrogating its achievements, limitations, and the reforms necessary to revitalise continental governance. It delineates a broad historical and normative trajectory, from the transition from the Organisation of African Unity (OAU) to the AU, to the development of the norms, institutions, and practices governing unconstitutional changes of government. This essay argues that the AU’s credibility has been steadily eroded by inconsistent implementation of its own standards. The AU has made significant progress in norm-setting and institutional design. This has included the adoption of the African Charter on Democracy, Elections and Governance (ACDEG) and the establishment of the AU Peace and Security Council. However, it has struggled to address
constitutional manipulation by incumbents with the same vigour applied to military coups. As global democratic recession and weakened continental institutions intensify political instability, the essay calls for a repoliticised AU and procedural reforms that enable early and principled intervention. Ultimately, it argues that addressing both military and civilian coups with consistency and courage is essential if the AU is to reclaim moral authority and advance democratic governance on the continent.

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Author Biography

Donald Deya, Pan African Lawyers Union

Donald Deya is the Chief Executive Officer of the Pan African Lawyers Union (PALU) based in Arusha, Tanzania. He was previously Chief Executive of the East Africa Law Society (EALS), and before that, Acting CEO of the Kenyan Section of the International Commission of Jurists (ICJ-Kenya), and Deputy CEO of the Law Society of Kenya (LSK). He, through his work at PALU, is a leading litigator before the East African Court of Justice and the African Court of Human and Peoples’ Rights. He also led the consulting team that drafted what became the Protocol on Amendments to the Protocol on the Statute of the African Court of Justice and Human Rights (Malabo Protocol).

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Published

2026-03-13

How to Cite

Deya, D. (2026). Reflecting on 25 years of the AU Constitutive Act: Unconstitutional changes of government . Kabarak Law Review, 4, 109–124. Retrieved from https://journals.kabarak.ac.ke/index.php/klr/article/view/718

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Section

Issue theme full-length articles

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