Access to Justice and Fair Trial Guarantees in Uganda’s Constitutional Court: A Doctrinal and Institutional Analysis
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The right to a fair trial stands as a foundational pillar of constitutionalism, democratic legitimacy, and international human rights law. In Uganda, however, the practical enforcement of this right within the Constitutional Court reveals an acute disjunction between normative promise and institutional performance. This article offers a pioneering, empirically grounded, and doctrinally rigorous examination of fair trial guarantees and access to justice in Uganda’s Constitutional Court, a key site of constitutional adjudication in an emerging democracy. Deploying a mixed-methods methodology that integrates doctrinal legal analysis, in-depth interviews, and case law review, the study interrogates how procedural rigidity, judicial delay, institutional under-capacity, restrictive standing rules, and the absence of state-supported legal aid systematically undermine access to constitutional remedies—particularly for indigent and marginalized litigants. Anchored in Uganda’s 1995 Constitution and procedural statutes, and framed against international standards such as Article 14 ICCPR and Article 7 ACHPR, this research articulates a normative and analytical framework for evaluating judicial practice in fragile democracies. To bridge the gap between formal rights and substantive access, the article introduces the theory of Constitutional Procedural Justice (CPJT), a novel analytical model conceptualising justice delivery along three intersecting axes: doctrinal guarantees, procedural accessibility, and institutional functionality. CPJT enables a more nuanced assessment of whether constitutional courts actualise, rather than merely articulate, fair trial rights. Comparative insights from South Africa, Germany, Hungary, and supranational human rights tribunals further expose the asymmetries in Uganda’s adjudicatory framework, offering reform-oriented strategies tailored to structurally weak legal systems. This research contributes new knowledge to global debates on constitutional justice and procedural fairness. It provides a scalable model for judicial reform in the Global South and offers actionable insights for courts, policymakers, and scholars committed to advancing transformative constitutionalism and access to justice.