Frequent protests, arising from a diversity of motivations, are a feature of the South African landscape. Despite the right to protest being entrenched in section 17 of the Constitution, it is under threat, and communities seeking to protest increasingly risk criminalisation. This article identifies some of the emerging themes in the protest landscape and the way the right to protest is being suppressed. Four dominant themes are highlighted through the lens of the experiences of the public interest legal sector: the conflation of notification and permission; heavy-handed state responses to protests; the abuse of bail procedures; and the use of interdicts. Law has become at least one of the sites of contestation in the protest arena. The pol...
In recent years, schools have borne the brunt of protesters’ frustrations with the lack of ac...
Recent heavy handedness from police and the authorities more generally has seen protest gradually ed...
Many have described South Africa as a protest-rich nation. Some have defended this high level of pro...
This issue of South African Crime Quarterly is a special issue focusing on protest. It is guest edit...
Despite the historical and ongoing importance of protest as a vehicle for children to express themse...
South Africa has seen a groundswell of protests in the past few years. The number of arrests ...
Judgment in the long-awaited SJC10 case was handed down on 24 January 2018. This case marks a victor...
In South Africa, the right to protest is under constant threat as a result of the state response. In...
The legal system in South Africa holds a legitimate and authoritative position in the country’s cons...
This article explores the nature and causes of prisoner protests, looking at it first from a sociolo...
While section 17 of the Constitution guarantees the right to freedom of assembly, the violence that ...
In recent years, schools have borne the brunt of protesters’ frustrations with the lack of access ...
This article focuses on providing new insights into the nature of public opinion about protest actio...
The Regulation of Gatherings Act (RGA) places strict guidelines on how to exercise the right to prot...
Section 17 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 enshrines the right to assemble...
In recent years, schools have borne the brunt of protesters’ frustrations with the lack of ac...
Recent heavy handedness from police and the authorities more generally has seen protest gradually ed...
Many have described South Africa as a protest-rich nation. Some have defended this high level of pro...
This issue of South African Crime Quarterly is a special issue focusing on protest. It is guest edit...
Despite the historical and ongoing importance of protest as a vehicle for children to express themse...
South Africa has seen a groundswell of protests in the past few years. The number of arrests ...
Judgment in the long-awaited SJC10 case was handed down on 24 January 2018. This case marks a victor...
In South Africa, the right to protest is under constant threat as a result of the state response. In...
The legal system in South Africa holds a legitimate and authoritative position in the country’s cons...
This article explores the nature and causes of prisoner protests, looking at it first from a sociolo...
While section 17 of the Constitution guarantees the right to freedom of assembly, the violence that ...
In recent years, schools have borne the brunt of protesters’ frustrations with the lack of access ...
This article focuses on providing new insights into the nature of public opinion about protest actio...
The Regulation of Gatherings Act (RGA) places strict guidelines on how to exercise the right to prot...
Section 17 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 enshrines the right to assemble...
In recent years, schools have borne the brunt of protesters’ frustrations with the lack of ac...
Recent heavy handedness from police and the authorities more generally has seen protest gradually ed...
Many have described South Africa as a protest-rich nation. Some have defended this high level of pro...