Maternal Health as a Justiciable Right in Nigeria and Africa.
Publication Date: 25/06/2026
Author(s): Amala Okafor.
Volume/Issue: Volume 9, Issue 1 (2026)
Page No: 119-128
Journal: African Journal of Law, Political Research and Administration (AJLPRA)
Abstract:
Amala Okafor's legal and policy analysis reframes maternal health in Nigeria and Africa as a justiciable right, confronting one of the continent's most glaring indicators of systemic governance failure, public health neglect, and legal under-enforcement. In Nigeria, which bears a disproportionate share of global maternal deaths, the crisis stems not from inevitable tragedy but from preventable causes rooted in weak institutions, chronic underfunding, socio-cultural barriers, and critically, the absence of enforceable accountability mechanisms. Unlike developed nations where maternal mortality often reflects mere systemic fragmentation within otherwise robust frameworks, Africa's challenge reveals deeper structural deficiencies that demand urgent rights-based intervention. Okafor argues affirmatively that state failures to deliver accessible, adequate, and timely maternal healthcare constitute clear violations of constitutionally enshrined socio-economic rights, statutory obligations under frameworks like Nigeria's National Health Act, and regional human rights instruments such as the African Charter on Human and Peoples' Rights. By synthesizing domestic jurisprudence with continental precedents, the analysis charts a transformative pathway: elevating maternal health from vague policy aspiration to concrete legal entitlement through strategic litigation, judicial benchmarks, and multi-stakeholder accountability. Recommendations emphasize mandatory health budget allocations (at least 15% of national spending), citizen-led enforcement suits, and governance innovations to halve Africa's 200,000+ annual maternal mortality burden. Ultimately, Okafor positions maternal health as Africa's moral and developmental imperative, urging policymakers to wield legal muscle over goodwill to save lives and build equity.
Keywords:
Maternal, Health, Right, Africa, Nigeria.
