Africa: Can the UN’s Transatlantic Slavery Decision Deliver Meaningful Reparations?

Africa: Can the UN’s Transatlantic Slavery Decision Deliver Meaningful Reparations?

The UN General Assembly’s landmark resolution is likely to be stymied by a world divided on how to right past wrongs. A Ghana-led resolution declaring the trafficking of enslaved Africans and racialised chattel enslavement the ‘gravest crime against humanity’ was adopted at the United Nations (UN) General Assembly on 25 March. Most countries (122) voted…

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Africa: Can the UN’s Transatlantic Slavery Decision Deliver Meaningful Reparations?

Africa: The Transatlantic Slave Trade Is the Gravest Crime Against Humanity – Why the UN Declaration Matters

The resolution passed by United Nations General Assembly on 25 May 2026 seeking recognition of the transatlantic slave trade as the “gravest crime against humanity” potentially creates a broader definition of crimes against humanity in international law and allows for restitution claims against perpetrators. The resolution could elevate the legal and moral standard for what…

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