South Africa’s Constitution protects the fundamental rights of all citizens, including children. The recent Children’s Act and the Children’s Amendment Act criminalise corporal punishment of children by their parents. This article endeavours to describe the dilemma between corporal punishment and human rights in South Africa. It investigates possible democratic approaches to resolving the dilemma and offers deliberative democracy as a possible way to guide discussions on this dilemma. The article evaluates the applicability of deliberative democracy to the case of corporal punishment and human rights and highlights the need to consider alternative strategies to discipline children
The infliction of corporal punishment on children (in the home) was found to be unconstitutional by ...
This article proceeds from the simple premise that hitting children hurts them-even when the hitting...
Children were in many respects defenceless victims of discriminatory practices in ‘apartheid South A...
South Africa’s Constitution protects the fundamental rights of all citizens, including children. The...
In October 2017, in YG v The State, the High Court in Gauteng handed down a judgment that declared t...
In Christian Education South Africa v Minister of Education, the Constitutional Court upheld the law...
Corporal punishment is a worldwide problem. The purpose withthis thesis is to promote a constructive...
South Africa has banned corporal punishment in every setting, except for one, the home. Despite havi...
This article reviews the abolition of the defence of reasonable chastisement by the South African Co...
The study sought to analyse the South African common law defence of moderate and reasonable child ch...
Commissioned by Save the Children Sweden, JulyThe study to be reported here is the first South Afric...
The article considers efforts to eradicate corporal punishment as an aspect of the global governance...
About the publication The prohibition against corporal punishment is an integral part of the broader...
This Article questions whether parents have a right to corporally punish their children, and if they...
Children were in many respects defenceless victims of discriminatory practices in ‘apartheid South A...
The infliction of corporal punishment on children (in the home) was found to be unconstitutional by ...
This article proceeds from the simple premise that hitting children hurts them-even when the hitting...
Children were in many respects defenceless victims of discriminatory practices in ‘apartheid South A...
South Africa’s Constitution protects the fundamental rights of all citizens, including children. The...
In October 2017, in YG v The State, the High Court in Gauteng handed down a judgment that declared t...
In Christian Education South Africa v Minister of Education, the Constitutional Court upheld the law...
Corporal punishment is a worldwide problem. The purpose withthis thesis is to promote a constructive...
South Africa has banned corporal punishment in every setting, except for one, the home. Despite havi...
This article reviews the abolition of the defence of reasonable chastisement by the South African Co...
The study sought to analyse the South African common law defence of moderate and reasonable child ch...
Commissioned by Save the Children Sweden, JulyThe study to be reported here is the first South Afric...
The article considers efforts to eradicate corporal punishment as an aspect of the global governance...
About the publication The prohibition against corporal punishment is an integral part of the broader...
This Article questions whether parents have a right to corporally punish their children, and if they...
Children were in many respects defenceless victims of discriminatory practices in ‘apartheid South A...
The infliction of corporal punishment on children (in the home) was found to be unconstitutional by ...
This article proceeds from the simple premise that hitting children hurts them-even when the hitting...
Children were in many respects defenceless victims of discriminatory practices in ‘apartheid South A...