CHALLENGES TO THE ‘COMMITTEE SYSTEM’ UNDER THE NIGERIAN PRESIDENTIAL AND BRITISH PARLIAMENTARY CONSTITUTIONS

Autor/innen

  • DR U.E. OKOLOCHA Autor/in
  • DR. M.D. ALUKO Autor/in

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.5281/6ec72k20

Schlagwörter:

Good governance, committee-system, democracy, legislative, parliamentary system, presidential system

Abstract

The committee system is an essential feature of modern legislatures, designed to manage complex law-making processes, facilitate oversight, and ensure the efficient performance of parliamentary functions. However, the effectiveness of committees varies significantly depending on the system of government in which they operate. This paper undertakes a comparative analysis of the challenges confronting the committee system under presidential and parliamentary constitutions of Nigeria and the United Kingdom, respectively. It is against this backdrop that the authors argued that institutional design, party discipline, executive-legislative relations, and political culture impact the autonomy, capacity, and effectiveness of legislative committees in each system. Furthermore, the presidential systems tend to allow for more committee independence due to a formal separation of powers, which often suffer from gridlock, partisanship, and executive interference, unlike parliamentary systems which benefits from greater party cohesion and legislative-executive alignment, notwithstanding its potential to experience excessive executive dominance and weakened committee autonomy. The authors maintained the inherent structural and functional challenges such as limited resources, weak enforcement of recommendations, politicisation of committee leadership, and lack of transparency. Drawing from comparative constitutional and legislative practices, the paper concluded that effective reform must be context-specific, aimed at strengthening institutional capacity, enhancing procedural rules, and ensuring greater public engagement in committee processes.

 

DOI: 10.5281/zenodo.17019631

Autor/innen-Biografien

  • DR U.E. OKOLOCHA

    DR U.E. OKOLOCHA [PhD, BL] Associate Professor, & Head, Department of Public Law, Faculty of Law, University of Abuja
    Email: euguene.okolocha@uniabuja.edu.ng

    Digital ID  https://orcid.org 0009-0005-7098-7108

  • DR. M.D. ALUKO

    DR. M.D. ALUKO [PhD, BL.] Legal Practitioner and Parliamentary Consultant

    Email: aluko.mike@gmail.com

Veröffentlicht

2025-09-09

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