International Norms and Regional Commitments in Consumer Protection Law: A Critical Appraisal of Zambia’s Alignment with the UN, EU, and SADC Legal Instruments
Alex Chola Kafwabulula and
Austin Mwange
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Alex Chola Kafwabulula: University of Zambia, Institute of Distance Education, Lusaka, Zambia
Austin Mwange: The University of Zambia, Graduate School of Business, Lusaka, Zambia
African Journal of Commercial Studies, 2025, vol. 6, issue 2
Abstract:
Globalisation has substantially transformed the regulatory context in which consumer protection norms are formulated and enforced, necessitating a coordinated international and regional approach. This article critically evaluates Zambia’s alignment with key supranational legal instruments governing unfair commercial practices—specifically, the United Nations Guidelines for Consumer Protection (UNGCP), the European Union’s Unfair Commercial Practices Directive (UCPD), and the Southern African Development Community (SADC) Declaration on Regional Cooperation in Competition and Consumer Policies. Drawing upon a doctrinal and comparative legal methodology, this review examines the normative content, legal status, and domestic incorporation of these instruments, and assesses their influence on Zambia’s Competition and Consumer Protection Act No. 24 of 2010. It interrogates how Zambia has internalised global consumer protection principles—particularly the prohibition of misleading and aggressive commercial practices—and evaluates the jurisprudential sufficiency of these transplants within a local regulatory ecosystem characterised by enforcement deficits and legal fragmentation. The article argues that while Zambia’s legal framework reflects a formal commitment to international best practices, significant normative gaps remain in achieving effective protection, especially in digital and cross-border consumer markets. Ultimately, the article recommends a purposive harmonisation strategy rooted in functional convergence and regulatory capacity building.
Keywords: Consumer Protection; Unfair Commercial Practices; United Nations Guidelines; European Union Directive; SADC Declaration; Zambia; International Legal Transplants; Comparative Consumer Law; Normative Harmonisation; Legal Transposition (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F53 K15 K23 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2025
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Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:cwk:ajocsk:2025-54
DOI: 10.59413/ajocs/v6.i2.21
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