Judgment in the long-awaited SJC10 case was handed down on 24 January 2018. This case marks a victory for the collective bane on civil society – that of the criminalisation of a convener of a protest for the failure to provide notice. It goes a long way to opening the space for more serious engagement on the legitimacy of the Regulation of Gatherings Act 1993 and its possible reformulation to give effect to section 17 of the Constitution – the right to peaceful and unarmed assembly. This appeal to the high court was brought by the SJC on very limited grounds, focusing only on the requirement to provide notice – a strategy that has paid off, as the contested section of the Regulation of Gatherings Act was declared unconstitutional. This case...
The cases we discuss in this article raise fundamental questions about access to justice. Inefficien...
The Regulation of Gatherings Act (RGA) places strict guidelines on how to exercise the right to prot...
In this chapter we analyze cases where social movement activists are prosecuted in the courts for pr...
South Africa has seen a groundswell of protests in the past few years. The number of arrests ...
Section 17 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 enshrines the right to assemble...
Frequent protests, arising from a diversity of motivations, are a feature of the South African lands...
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...
Section 3 of the Regulation of Gatherings Act 205 of 1993 (RGA) requires the local authority within ...
The proposals contained in Clauses 54 to 60 of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Court Bill seek to ...
The legal system in South Africa holds a legitimate and authoritative position in the country’s cons...
This contribution aims to point out valuable lessons from the shortcomings of the Judicial Service C...
This contribution aims to point out valuable lessons from the shortcomings of the Judicial Service C...
While section 17 of the Constitution guarantees the right to freedom of assembly, the violence that ...
Policing demonstrations is difficult, and prosecuting people for public order offences arising from ...
The cases we discuss in this article raise fundamental questions about access to justice. Inefficien...
The Regulation of Gatherings Act (RGA) places strict guidelines on how to exercise the right to prot...
In this chapter we analyze cases where social movement activists are prosecuted in the courts for pr...
South Africa has seen a groundswell of protests in the past few years. The number of arrests ...
Section 17 of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 enshrines the right to assemble...
Frequent protests, arising from a diversity of motivations, are a feature of the South African lands...
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...
Section 3 of the Regulation of Gatherings Act 205 of 1993 (RGA) requires the local authority within ...
The proposals contained in Clauses 54 to 60 of the Police, Crime, Sentencing and Court Bill seek to ...
The legal system in South Africa holds a legitimate and authoritative position in the country’s cons...
This contribution aims to point out valuable lessons from the shortcomings of the Judicial Service C...
This contribution aims to point out valuable lessons from the shortcomings of the Judicial Service C...
While section 17 of the Constitution guarantees the right to freedom of assembly, the violence that ...
Policing demonstrations is difficult, and prosecuting people for public order offences arising from ...
The cases we discuss in this article raise fundamental questions about access to justice. Inefficien...
The Regulation of Gatherings Act (RGA) places strict guidelines on how to exercise the right to prot...
In this chapter we analyze cases where social movement activists are prosecuted in the courts for pr...