Code of Conduct - Kenya Review Act of 2001
This Code of Conduct for members and staff of the Kenyan Constitutional Commission is extracted from the Constitution of Kenya Review Act, 2001.
This Code of Conduct for members and staff of the Kenyan Constitutional Commission is extracted from the Constitution of Kenya Review Act, 2001.
This is a comprehensive guide to constitution-making and reform. The book identifies the tasks that need to be carried out, the procedures that can be used, and who can do them. It is intended for a wide audience and to be a guide for anyone who is engaged in a constitution-making process, or who is interested in improving constitution-making practice.
This is an IDEA sample code of conduct for members of constitution-making bodies.
Prepared for UN Constitutionmaker
This paper, part of IDEA's Women and Constitution Building Initiative in Nepal, raised issues about how Nepal's Constituent Assembly would work, and how its procedures would impact both on the way women members played a part in its work, and how women's issues would be dealt with in the new Constitution.
This is a comprehensive guide to constitution-making and reform. The book identifies the tasks that need to be carried out, the procedures that can be used, and who can do them. It is intended for a wide audience and to be a guide for anyone who is engaged in a constitution-making process, or who is interested in improving constitution-making practice.
This document is the internal rules of procedure for South Sudan's National Constitutional Review Commission.
These are guidelines relating to the membership, mandate and rules of procedure for both the ad hoc and technical working committees of the 2003 National Constitutional Conference.
This is the decree of Egypt's 50-member constitutional committee's President, entering into force the rules of procedure for the committee's final drafting of the constitutional amendments in Egypt following the removal of Mohamed Morsi as President in July 2013. Included in the document are the Rules of Procedure, prepared pursuant to Article 29 of the Constitutional Declaration of July 8, 2013. The english translation is provided by International IDEA.
The first document is the unofficial English translation by the International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA) of the Rules of Procedure for the Tunisian National Constituent Assembly, adopted in December 2011.