FRELIP Weekly Research Digest — Law (week of 27 June 2026)

FRELIP · Open Access Research Digest
Law
Week ending 27 June 2026
10 new OA papers🌍 6 African-led🔬 4 global
10
new OA papers
6
African-led
4
global
10
journals
Featured open-access journals: Environmental Science & Policy · E-Journal of Humanities Arts and Social Sciences · Latin American Law Review · CUPEA Cuadernos de Política Exterior Argentina · Al-ISTINBATH Jurnal Hukum Islam · Uzhhorod National University Herald Series Law · International Journal for the Semiotics of Law – Revue internationale de Sémiotique juridique

This week in Law, five papers examine constitutional equality, judicial transparency, and legal culture across Africa and beyond.

📊 This week at a glance

#FindingJournalLeadRegion
1Indigenous Peoples are often used as spectacle in biodiversity and climate governance without rEnvironmental Science & PolicyKoot🌍 African
2South Africa’s constitutional equality framework is key to addressing gender-based violence agaE-Journal of Humanities Arts and Social SciencesNodangala🌍 African
3Colombia’s Constitutional Court rulings on prepaid medicine reveal tension between private contLatin American Law ReviewRosas🌍 African
4Watching Kenya’s televised Supreme Court election petitions increased democratic participationCUPEA Cuadernos de Política Exterior ArgentinaSanday🌍 African
5Electronic consent in notarial, healthcare, and child protection practices needs ethical groundAl-ISTINBATH Jurnal Hukum IslamMashdurohatun🌍 African
6Confucian values like ritual propriety and benevolence still shape Chinese students’ legal cultUzhhorod National University Herald Series LawYermolenko🌍 African
7Evidentiary adjudication can be framed as both practical judgment and narrative, but authenticiInternational Journal for the Semiotics of Law – Revue internationale de Sémiotique juridiqueLinhares🔬 Global
8China’s rural land expropriation reforms must address fiscal dependence and social conflict rooLandHua🔬 Global
9The legal concept of ‘care’ in tort, medical, and family law shares a core meaning that justifiLaw and PhilosophyChadha-Sridhar🔬 Global
10Power dynamics in Australian interpreter-mediated virtual courtrooms affect linguistic equity fAustralian Journal of LinguisticsYi🔬 Global

🌍 African-led research

Indigenous Peoples are often used as spectacle in biodiversity and climate governance without real power.

The paper argues that international governance frameworks treat Indigenous Peoples as symbolic tokens rather than genuine partners. This shifts focus from performative inclusion to substantive decision-making power. For African scholarship, it challenges researchers to scrutinize who truly benefits from participatory governance.

Stasja Koot et al. · Environmental Science & Policy

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South Africa’s constitutional equality framework is key to addressing gender-based violence against marginalized identities.

The study links democracy, human rights, and social justice in post-apartheid South Africa, showing that constitutional protections must actively include marginalized groups to combat GBV. This implies that legal reforms alone are insufficient without enforcement that reaches the most vulnerable. For African policy, it underscores the need for intersectional approaches to violence prevention.

Norless Zibele Nodangala et al. · E-Journal of Humanities Arts and Social Sciences

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Colombia’s Constitutional Court rulings on prepaid medicine reveal tension between private contract law and constitutional rights.

The analysis of tutela rulings (constitutional complaints) from 2019–2024 shows the Court balancing user protections against provider autonomy. This changes the view that private healthcare contracts are purely commercial, highlighting their constitutional dimension. For African legal scholars, it offers a model for examining how constitutional rights permeate private law.

Juan Felipe Parra Rosas et al. · Latin American Law Review

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Watching Kenya’s televised Supreme Court election petitions increased democratic participation among Nairobi residents.

Survey data from 250 Nairobi residents shows that courtroom broadcasting can activate civic engagement, not just build trust. This challenges the assumption that transparency alone suffices, showing that visibility can spur citizenship. For African judiciaries, it suggests that televising high-profile cases may strengthen democratic accountability.

Alfred Wandera Sanday et al. · CUPEA Cuadernos de Política Exterior Argentina

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Electronic consent in notarial, healthcare, and child protection practices needs ethical grounding beyond legal validity.

The study uses Maqashid al-Shari’ah (Islamic legal objectives) to critique e-consent for failing to ensure meaningful autonomy and protection of vulnerable individuals. This shifts focus from mere compliance to ethical legitimacy. For African contexts with Islamic legal traditions, it offers a framework to evaluate digital consent practices.

Anis Mashdurohatun et al. · Al-ISTINBATH Jurnal Hukum Islam

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Confucian values like ritual propriety and benevolence still shape Chinese students’ legal culture amid globalization.

The study finds that core Confucian principles (li, fa, ren, yi) influence how Chinese students perceive law and justice, even in a digital age. This challenges the assumption that modernization erodes traditional legal cultures. For African scholars, it highlights the persistence of indigenous values in legal socialization.

Iryna Yermolenko et al. · Uzhhorod National University Herald Series Law

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🔬 Global breakthroughs

Evidentiary adjudication can be framed as both practical judgment and narrative, but authenticity remains elusive in the videosphere.

The paper explores whether evidentiary decision-making can retain practical rationality when trials are mediated by screens and narratives. It questions whether authentic subjectivity is possible in a ‘stochastic dance’ of images. For African legal systems adopting digital evidence, this raises concerns about procedural fairness.

J. M. Aroso Linhares et al. · International Journal for the Semiotics of Law – Revue internationale de Sémiotique juridique

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China’s rural land expropriation reforms must address fiscal dependence and social conflict rooted in historical institutional logics.

Tracing a century of institutional change, the article argues that land expropriation’s problems stem from political and economic logics, not just legal gaps. This shifts reform focus to governance structures. For African countries undergoing land reforms, it warns against replicating models that entrench fiscal reliance on expropriation.

Ziyan Hua et al. · Land

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The legal concept of ‘care’ in tort, medical, and family law shares a core meaning that justifies unified analysis.

Contrary to the assumption that ‘care’ means different things across legal domains, the paper argues for a consolidated concept. This changes how courts and scholars approach duties of care. For African legal systems, it could simplify the application of care standards across contexts.

Ira Chadha-Sridhar et al. · Law and Philosophy

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Power dynamics in Australian interpreter-mediated virtual courtrooms affect linguistic equity for Indigenous and migrant communities.

The study examines how questions and answers are formulated and interpreted in technology-empowered courts, revealing embedded power imbalances. This shifts focus from content accuracy to procedural fairness. For African courts adopting remote hearings, it highlights the need to safeguard linguistic rights.

Ran Yi et al. · Australian Journal of Linguistics

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Why this week matters: Across these papers, law is shown as a site of contested power—whether through constitutional equality, judicial transparency, or cultural values—demanding that African scholars critically assess whose voices are heard and whose rights are protected.

All papers are open access. Explore more Law research on FRELIP · discover open scholarship at frelip.org and search 36,000+ open works at search.frelip.org. FRELIP — born in Nigeria, built for African scholarship, serving the world.

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