Abstract :
The world currently has a profusion of intergovernmental organizations charged
with various public functions previously reserved for states. The operations of
these organizations affect the ordinary lives of individual citizens in the member
states. Yet these organizations are not legitimate, based on the standard expected
of a democratic state government. This article joins the chorus demanding the legitimization
of international organizations that perform public functions, taking into
account their peculiar circumstances and nature, and with specific reference to
the East African Community. It sets out criteria for assessing legitimacy and examines
the organs, functions and administration of the East African Community against
those criteria. It argues that, as presently established and structured, the East African
Community seriously lacks legitimacy. There is therefore an urgent need for reform,
to avoid this body becoming yet another statistic of moribund regional integration
schemes in Africa.