Sloth-Nielsen, JuliaOdongo, Godfrey OdhiamboFaculty of Law2013-07-122025-03-032007/04/192007/04/192013-07-122025-03-032005https://hdl.handle.net/10566/20223Doctor Legum - LLDThe thesis focused on how the advent of children's rights, in particular the Convention on the Rights of the Child (CRC), has impacted on the subject of juvenile justice and embarked on a practical examination of law reform in this regard in an African context. The focus was placed on a number of African countries that have embarked on or completed child law reform in the aftermath of ratification of the CRC. The case studies in this thesis were Ghana (1998-2003), Kenya (1993-2001), Namibia (1994 to date), Lesotho (2003 to date), South Africa (1997 to date) and Uganda (1992-1996).enConvention on the Rights of the Child (1989)Children (International law)ChildrenLegal statuslawsAfricaChildren's rightsJuvenile justiceAdministration of AfricaThe domestication of international law standards on the rights of the child with specific reference to juvenile justice in the African contextThesisUniversity of the Western Cape