Discover Sauda Nabukenya's published works, including books, articles, and research papers. Her contributions to the field of legal history are invaluable resources for scholars and enthusiasts alike.
Epistemological Limits of Government Archives: Recovering the Voices of Ordinary Litigants in Local Legal Archives and Writing a New Legal History in Dong, Kashanipour, Konova, LeJacq Nikulina, Oliva, Pitamber (eds), CLIR symposium, Adventure, Inquiry, Discovery: CLIR-Mellon Fellows and the Archives (2023)
Why constitutions in Africa do not stand the test of time? Lessons and Perspectives from Uganda’s 1995 Constitution, in Powell, r Durojaye, Visser, Steytler (eds) Constitution-Building in Africa, University of the Western Cape Community Law Centre 2015
The Power Dynamics of the Constitution Making Processes. Lessons and Perspectives from Uganda. Masters’ dissertation, Makerere University, (2008)
Proffesional Papers Delivered
2013 Colonialism and its Legacies on constitutional development in Africa. A case of Uganda.
Conference Research for social, economic transformation, Kyambogo University.
2016 Multiple Identities: Civic vs. Ethnic Nationalism in Uganda (1958-1962), Conference “Singular
Voices, Multiple Identities”, University of Toronto Canada, Canada.
2016. Strange Bed Fellows: The politics of pre-independence political party alliance between UPC and
KY through the lens of Munno, University of Michigan.
2017 Ethnic balancing, Racial Bargaining, Political Exclusions and Constitutional Development in
Uganda, 1950-1967.Conference Race, Law, and History, University of Michigan.
2021. Struggles and strategies of the landless: contesting possession, and the framing of legal regimes
in Buganda, University of Michigan AHAW workshops
2022. The role of Ordinary people and Local Evidentiary Practices in community policing and Criminal Justice in Colonial Buganda,
1900-1962. University of Michigan AHAW workshops.