Enforcing Foreign Judgments in Nigeria: Any Role for the National Industrial Court?

Authors

  • Oluwakayode Ojo Arowosegbe

Keywords:

Abstract

The Third Alteration Act altered the Constitution to make the National Industrial Court NIC a superior Court In spite of this jurists have continued to deny the NIC the right to enforce foreign judgments on labour matters The arguments are that because the NIC is not listed in S 2 1 of the Foreign Judgments Reciprocal Enforcement Act FJA it lacks jurisdiction in this regard and that enforcement of foreign judgments does not involve exercise of jurisdiction but mere exercise of power Consequently the NIC has handed down a decision divesting itself of jurisdiction However the research finds that the arguments are fallacious and that the NIC has exclusive jurisdiction to enforce foreign labour judgments in Nigeria The research opines that the gestating controversy must be nipped in the bud for the nation to reap the benefits of the bounties of the globalized labour market It recommends deletion of the problematic part of S 2 1 of the FJA the overhaul and merging of the two cognate statutes to bring up the Nigerian law in tune with international best practices The research being doctrinal relies on cognate statutes case laws and journal articles

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How to Cite

Oluwakayode Ojo Arowosegbe. (2023). Enforcing Foreign Judgments in Nigeria: Any Role for the National Industrial Court?. Global Journal of Human-Social Science, 23(F2), 51–63. Retrieved from https://socialscienceresearch.org/index.php/GJHSS/article/view/103709

Enforcing Foreign Judgments in Nigeria: Any Role for the National Industrial Court?

Published

2023-06-10