eprintid: 37377 rev_number: 10 userid: 5570 dir: disk0/00/03/73/77 datestamp: 2019-08-15 14:10:10 lastmod: 2019-08-15 14:10:10 status_changed: 2019-08-15 14:10:10 type: book_section metadata_visibility: show contact_email: mvs31@pitt.edu eprint_status: archive creators_name: Sirleaf, Matiangai creators_email: matiangai.sirleaf@pitt.edu creators_id: MVS31 creators_orcid: 0000-0002-4187-2783 title: Prosecuting Dirty Dumping in Africa ispublished: pub divisions: sch_law_law full_text_status: public abstract: This Article examines how the African Union’s adoption of the Malabo Protocol seeks to improve upon the limitations of the international legal framework for regulating hazardous waste. The Malabo Protocol criminalizes trafficking in hazardous waste and envisions a regional forum for such prosecutions, which presents an opportunity for African states to alter the status quo in environmental protection. This Article examines how the troubling history of toxic colonialism in Africa helped to inform the attempt to criminalize the trafficking of hazardous waste and create a forum under the Malabo Protocol for combating dirty dumping. This Article explores how the inadequate international legal framework for regulating hazardous waste led to the attempt to create a more robust regional regime under the Bamako Convention, with the Malabo Protocol serving as the vehicle for regional enforcement. It evaluates whether the Protocol furthers the punitive objectives of the Bamako regime to punish and deter trafficking in hazardous waste. It does this by analyzing whether the regional prosecution of dirty dumping is consistent with the newer theories of punishment, as well as some of the more traditional goals of punishment. This Article also analyzes the implications of the regional prosecution of dirty dumping under the Malabo Protocol. It assesses the potential challenges that might arise in the attempt to regionally prosecute trafficking in hazardous waste and suggests ways these issues can be resolved through creative interpretation of the Malabo Protocol. Lastly, this Article concludes that the Malabo Protocol’s provision for a regional forum for the prosecutions of traffickers of hazardous waste presents another venue for African states whose domestic judiciaries and related institutions may have limited resources. If implemented, the Protocol could facilitate closing the global impunity gap for dirty dumping in Africa. date: 2019 date_type: published series: Development and Challenges publisher: Cambridge University Press pagerange: 553-589 refereed: TRUE book_title: The African Court of Justice and Human and Peoples' Rights in Context: Development and Challenges editors_name: Clarke, Kamari editors_name: Jalloh, Charles official_url: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/african-court-of-justice-and-human-and-peoples-rights-in-context/prosecuting-dirty-dumping-in-africa/D1A8883D5EEECCD620F35161F0428753/core-reader id_number: 10.1017/9781108525343.021 citation: Sirleaf, Matiangai (2019) Prosecuting Dirty Dumping in Africa. In: The African Court of Justice and Human and Peoples' Rights in Context: Development and Challenges. Development and Challenges . Cambridge University Press, pp. 553-589. ISBN UNSPECIFIED document_url: http://d-scholarship-dev.library.pitt.edu/37377/1/prosecuting_dirty_dumping_in_africa.pdf