Skip to Content
Afritondo
Home
Shop
Magazine
Fiction
Poetry
Essay
Politics
Books
Yellow Means Stay
The Hope, The Prayer, The Anthem
Rain Dance
The Dogs and The Baboons: The Human Rights Revolution Nigeria Needs
The Institute for Creative Dying
Short Story Prize 2025
Call 2025 - Masks
Judges 2025
Guidelines 2025
Announcement - Submission Closed
Longlist
Longlist Profiles 2025
Shortlist 2025
Events
About
Submit Manuscript
Contact
Subscribe
Donate
(0)
Cart (0)
(0)
Cart (0)
Afritondo
Home
Shop
Magazine
Fiction
Poetry
Essay
Politics
Books
Yellow Means Stay
The Hope, The Prayer, The Anthem
Rain Dance
The Dogs and The Baboons: The Human Rights Revolution Nigeria Needs
The Institute for Creative Dying
Short Story Prize 2025
Call 2025 - Masks
Judges 2025
Guidelines 2025
Announcement - Submission Closed
Longlist
Longlist Profiles 2025
Shortlist 2025
Events
About
Submit Manuscript
Contact
Subscribe
Donate
Home
Shop
Folder: Magazine
Back
Fiction
Poetry
Essay
Politics
Folder: Books
Back
Yellow Means Stay
The Hope, The Prayer, The Anthem
Rain Dance
The Dogs and The Baboons: The Human Rights Revolution Nigeria Needs
The Institute for Creative Dying
Folder: Short Story Prize 2025
Back
Call 2025 - Masks
Judges 2025
Guidelines 2025
Announcement - Submission Closed
Longlist
Longlist Profiles 2025
Shortlist 2025
Events
About
Submit Manuscript
Contact
Subscribe
Donate
Shop The Dogs and the Baboons: The Human Rights Revolution Nigeria Needs
Untitled design.png Image 1 of
Untitled design.png
Untitled design.png

The Dogs and the Baboons: The Human Rights Revolution Nigeria Needs

£9.99

The Dogs and the Baboons explores the near total absence of human rights protection in Nigeria and canvasses for a "human rights revolution" as the starting point to reforming the country. It is written in an informal style and makes a conscious effort to jettison formality in favour of a light-hearted and conversational style of writing. It mixes humour, street language, legal experiences, and news reports, in covering a breadth of subjects. In the main, it covers the observance of a variety of recognised human rights, borrowing from the author's experiences as a lawyer in one of the country's leading law firms and the son of one of the country's leading activists. The book discusses ingrained practices and topics such as mob violence, police brutality, servitude, religious intolerance, poverty, and corruption amongst others, explaining how a national human rights acculturation could curtail and ultimately eradicate these challenges.

Quantity:
Add To Cart

The Dogs and the Baboons explores the near total absence of human rights protection in Nigeria and canvasses for a "human rights revolution" as the starting point to reforming the country. It is written in an informal style and makes a conscious effort to jettison formality in favour of a light-hearted and conversational style of writing. It mixes humour, street language, legal experiences, and news reports, in covering a breadth of subjects. In the main, it covers the observance of a variety of recognised human rights, borrowing from the author's experiences as a lawyer in one of the country's leading law firms and the son of one of the country's leading activists. The book discusses ingrained practices and topics such as mob violence, police brutality, servitude, religious intolerance, poverty, and corruption amongst others, explaining how a national human rights acculturation could curtail and ultimately eradicate these challenges.

The Dogs and the Baboons explores the near total absence of human rights protection in Nigeria and canvasses for a "human rights revolution" as the starting point to reforming the country. It is written in an informal style and makes a conscious effort to jettison formality in favour of a light-hearted and conversational style of writing. It mixes humour, street language, legal experiences, and news reports, in covering a breadth of subjects. In the main, it covers the observance of a variety of recognised human rights, borrowing from the author's experiences as a lawyer in one of the country's leading law firms and the son of one of the country's leading activists. The book discusses ingrained practices and topics such as mob violence, police brutality, servitude, religious intolerance, poverty, and corruption amongst others, explaining how a national human rights acculturation could curtail and ultimately eradicate these challenges.