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The suitability of the CISG and OHADA for small and medium-sized enterprises engaging in international trade in west and central Africa

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dc.contributor.advisor Eiselen, Sieg
dc.contributor.author Donfack, Narcisse Gaetan Zebaze
dc.date.accessioned 2016-07-19T07:00:06Z
dc.date.available 2016-07-19T07:00:06Z
dc.date.issued 2015-12
dc.date.submitted 2016-07-19
dc.identifier.citation Donfack, Narcisse Gaetan Zebaze (2015) The suitability of the CISG and OHADA for small and medium-sized enterprises engaging in international trade in west and central Africa, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/21020> en
dc.identifier.uri http://hdl.handle.net/10500/21020
dc.description.abstract It is universally acknowledged that international trade and cooperation have become key drivers of SMEs. Indeed, the success of SMEs in the sales sector depends upon their capacity to conquer the foreign market and compete with larger companies. Many SMEs today, in particular those in Central and West Africa, are very much aware of this reality. However, because of differences between domestic laws and their maladjustment, many African SMEs still struggle to enter the international market and compete with larger companies. It is therefore obvious that any SMEs that want to succeed in international commerce today will be called upon to confront different regulations, whether domestic, regional or international, which are often shaped according to the realities and expectations of a particular environment. The challenge today is to regulate and harmonise these different legal systems, in order to render the law identical in numerous jurisdictions. This process of unifying the law internationally, in particular the law of sale, started in 1920 and culminated in 1988, with the implementation of the CISG. This Convention, which has become the primary law for international sales contracts, endeavours to deal with this problem of differences in law between states on a global scale, by attempting to achieve a synthesis between different legislations, such as civil law, common law, socialist law, and the law regarding industrialised and Third World countries. Even though the CISG appears to be a compromise between different legal systems, the fact remains that it is not yet applicable in many countries, especially those in Central and West Africa, which are mostly still ruled by domestic and regional law, namely the OHADA. The purpose of this study is to attempt to analyse and compare the OHADA’s Uniform Act Relating to Commercial Law to the CISG, in order to identify similarities and differences between the two, and to determine, with regard to the operating mode and structure of SMEs in West and Central Africa, which one of the two legislations is more appropriate. en
dc.format.extent 1 online resource (xvi, 329 leaves) : illustrations (1 color) en
dc.language.iso en en
dc.subject SMEs en
dc.subject Internationalisation en
dc.subject CISG en
dc.subject Comparative law en
dc.subject Cameroon contract law en
dc.subject Cameroon Civil Code en
dc.subject OHADA law en
dc.subject Formation of a contract en
dc.subject International sales law en
dc.subject Obligations of the buyer en
dc.subject Obligations of the seller en
dc.subject Sales of goods en
dc.subject Incoterms en
dc.subject Termination of a contract en
dc.subject.ddc 343.878066
dc.subject.lcsh United Nations Convention on Contracts for the International Sale of Goods (1980 April 11) en
dc.subject.lcsh Organisation pour l'harmonisation en Afrique du droit des affaires
dc.subject.lcsh Export sales contracts -- Africa, West en
dc.subject.lcsh Export sales contracts -- Africa, Central en
dc.subject.lcsh Small business -- Africa, West en
dc.subject.lcsh Small business -- Africa, Central en
dc.subject.lcsh Foreign trade regulation -- Africa, West en
dc.subject.lcsh Foreign trade regulation -- Africa, Central en
dc.subject.lcsh Africa, West -- Commerce en
dc.subject.lcsh Africa, Central -- Commerce en
dc.subject.lcsh Conflict of laws -- Sales -- Africa, West en
dc.subject.lcsh Conflict of laws -- Sales -- Africa, Central en
dc.title The suitability of the CISG and OHADA for small and medium-sized enterprises engaging in international trade in west and central Africa en
dc.type Dissertation en
dc.description.department Private Law en
dc.description.degree LL. M.


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