Law reform in a developing country: A new code of obligations for Senegal
Law reform in a developing country: A new code of obligations for Senegal
The Republic of Senegal has embarked upon a project to reform its private law. This fact, of itself, might not seem worthy of the attention of the legal profession in the United States, since Senegal is a country of only about 3,250,000 inhabitants, less than the population of the state of Alabama, covering only 76,000 square miles, less than the area of the state of Kansas, and having a total of exports and imports to the dollar zone of less than twelve million dollars in 1962. With twenty per cent of its population in its six largest cities of more than 30,000 inhabitants, it is the most urban, most literate, and most Europeanized of the francophonic countries of sub-Saharan Africa, but this alone would evoke little interest abroad in its attempts at law reform.
CITATION: Farnsworth, E.Allan. Law reform in a developing country: A new code of obligations for Senegal . : Cambridge University Press , 1964. Journal of African Law,Vol.8,No.1,1964,pp.6-19 - Available at: https://library.au.int/frlaw-reform-developing-country-new-code-obligations-senegal-3