The corpus of Professor Ojobi’s work can be divided into three distinct pillars: Constitutional Theory, Human Rights Litigation, and Comparative Indigenous Jurisprudence.
Professor Dauda Ojobi’s books do not seek to entertain. They seek to equip. In an era where African legal scholarship is often either blindly imitative of Western models or insular to the point of irrelevance, Ojobi walks the difficult middle path. He asks hard questions about power, land, money, and morality—and refuses the comfort of easy answers. professor dauda ojobi books
Law books often have a short shelf life. Laws are repealed; precedents are overruled. However, the works of Professor Ojobi defy obsolescence for three specific reasons: The corpus of Professor Ojobi’s work can be
He has published numerous papers in reputable local and international journals concerning industrial relations, personnel management, and labor law. 3. "Ina Gaskiyar Take?" (Where is the Truth?) In an era where African legal scholarship is