The student protests in South African Universities, which started in 2015, demanded the decolonisation of certain aspects of higher education. While the primary demand is free education, issues of the curriculum and transformation connected with the country's history of colonialism and apartheid have also surfaced. In the field of law, demands for curriculum change are accompanied by the broad issue of the decolonisation of law, translating into questions of legal history, the concept of law, the role of law in African societies, the status of indigenous systems of law in the post-independent/apartheid legal system, and how law is taught in law schools. This paper examines the idea of the decolonisation of law in relation to the teaching of...
The article examines the possibility of creating an indigenous legal pluralism within the South Afr...
In Africa, man practiced law for centuries before we embarked on theorising about it. The normative ...
This article reflects on recent debates on legal education in South Africa. I argue that the value o...
The student protests in South African Universities, which started in 2015, demanded the decolonisa...
Fees-related protests in South African universities have pushed the decolonisation of the law curric...
African customary law is a legal system that is recognised in South Africa and forms part of the law...
Fees-related protests in South African universities have pushed the decolonisation of the law curric...
The interim Constitution of 1994 unleashed a heated debate about the role of African customary law a...
In the advent of the current dispensation, South Africa’s Constitution elucidates that customary law...
It is often said that customary law is unwritten, as its knowledge system is not recorded in statute...
Prompted by the “Rhodes Must Fall” movement in South Africa, debates concerning the decolonisation o...
This book offers an international breadth of historical and theoretical insights into recent efforts...
LLM (Human Rights)Ismail Mahomed Centre for Human and People's RightsCustomary law refers to both, w...
The mini dissertation explores an African jurisprudential perspective on land and property. The inve...
In the aftermath of the 2015-2016 student protests on South African university campuses, many univer...
The article examines the possibility of creating an indigenous legal pluralism within the South Afr...
In Africa, man practiced law for centuries before we embarked on theorising about it. The normative ...
This article reflects on recent debates on legal education in South Africa. I argue that the value o...
The student protests in South African Universities, which started in 2015, demanded the decolonisa...
Fees-related protests in South African universities have pushed the decolonisation of the law curric...
African customary law is a legal system that is recognised in South Africa and forms part of the law...
Fees-related protests in South African universities have pushed the decolonisation of the law curric...
The interim Constitution of 1994 unleashed a heated debate about the role of African customary law a...
In the advent of the current dispensation, South Africa’s Constitution elucidates that customary law...
It is often said that customary law is unwritten, as its knowledge system is not recorded in statute...
Prompted by the “Rhodes Must Fall” movement in South Africa, debates concerning the decolonisation o...
This book offers an international breadth of historical and theoretical insights into recent efforts...
LLM (Human Rights)Ismail Mahomed Centre for Human and People's RightsCustomary law refers to both, w...
The mini dissertation explores an African jurisprudential perspective on land and property. The inve...
In the aftermath of the 2015-2016 student protests on South African university campuses, many univer...
The article examines the possibility of creating an indigenous legal pluralism within the South Afr...
In Africa, man practiced law for centuries before we embarked on theorising about it. The normative ...
This article reflects on recent debates on legal education in South Africa. I argue that the value o...