Description
This book inquires into the effectiveness of regional and international environmental law frameworks in the Lake Victoria Basin. Such an inquiry in the context of trans-boundary resource co-operation in the Lake Victoria Basin brings to light the anodyne nature of the legal framework and institutions responsible for effective management and trans-boundary co-operation. It is clear however that the solution lies not in the adoption of more laws to regulate diverse transboundary aspects of the Lake Victoria Basin but rather in initiating a strong political process that will eventually enhance the quality of extant laws as well as the reach of institutional implementation.