At the Constitutional Court, collegial deliberation is lengthy, substantive and conducted both verbally in meetings and electronically by the exchange of notes and drafts. During the course of deliberation on a particular case, the court will meet at least twice to discuss it and often as many as half a dozen times and sometimes even more. In addition, there will ordinarily be many lengthy written exchanges on the case. The process of deliberation at its best refines issues, improves legal reasoning and renders just outcomes more likely. As a result of the process of deliberation, a draft judgment may change dramatically from when first written to its final form
This engaging, readable law book is timely for many reasons. In this period of political turmoil, am...
As South Africa emerges from the vestiges of apartheid, its Constitutional Court struggles to develo...
Initially, deliberative politics offers a failure of self-identity in that the literature dealing wi...
This article, published in South Africa\u27s Constitutional Court Review, focuses on the Constitutio...
The Constitutional Court is the highest court in all constitutional matters and thus decides appeals...
For close to a century, students of judicial behavior have suggested that what judges think is not a...
The entrenchment of a Bill of Rights in a supreme Constitution in South Africa means that constituti...
This paper focuses on the manner, in which the Constitutional Court, in its early jurisprudence, set...
The rule of law as a foundational constitutional value constrains the exercise of public power but t...
The Constitutional Court is the highest court in all constitutional matters and thus decides appeals...
The Constitutional Court is the highest court in all constitutional matters and thus decides appeals...
Publisher versionThe rule of law as a foundational constitutional value constrains the exercise of p...
Political deliberation is a classic component of collective decision-making. It consists in forming...
The rule of law as a foundational constitutional value constrains the exercise of public power but t...
The law-making role of judges has always been the subject of much controversy. For a good many a yea...
This engaging, readable law book is timely for many reasons. In this period of political turmoil, am...
As South Africa emerges from the vestiges of apartheid, its Constitutional Court struggles to develo...
Initially, deliberative politics offers a failure of self-identity in that the literature dealing wi...
This article, published in South Africa\u27s Constitutional Court Review, focuses on the Constitutio...
The Constitutional Court is the highest court in all constitutional matters and thus decides appeals...
For close to a century, students of judicial behavior have suggested that what judges think is not a...
The entrenchment of a Bill of Rights in a supreme Constitution in South Africa means that constituti...
This paper focuses on the manner, in which the Constitutional Court, in its early jurisprudence, set...
The rule of law as a foundational constitutional value constrains the exercise of public power but t...
The Constitutional Court is the highest court in all constitutional matters and thus decides appeals...
The Constitutional Court is the highest court in all constitutional matters and thus decides appeals...
Publisher versionThe rule of law as a foundational constitutional value constrains the exercise of p...
Political deliberation is a classic component of collective decision-making. It consists in forming...
The rule of law as a foundational constitutional value constrains the exercise of public power but t...
The law-making role of judges has always been the subject of much controversy. For a good many a yea...
This engaging, readable law book is timely for many reasons. In this period of political turmoil, am...
As South Africa emerges from the vestiges of apartheid, its Constitutional Court struggles to develo...
Initially, deliberative politics offers a failure of self-identity in that the literature dealing wi...