This article examines two contradictory conceptions of customary law, as either fundamentally democratic or autocratic, and their impact on the constant reconstruction of and resistance to chiefly authority in modern-day South Africa. In the last 15 years or so South Africa has witnessed a strong legislative agenda to centralise the power of senior traditional leaders. The new traditional authority laws’ ahistorical, authoritarian understanding of customary law – as something to be defined and imposed on rural communities by senior traditional leaders – is directly opposed to the Constitutional Court’s interpretation of customary law as something to be determined with reference to practice from and acceptance by the people whose customary l...
The institution of traditional leadership represents the early form of societal organisation. It emb...
This article discusses South Africa’s phenomenon of traditional leadership which is widely ves...
Post-1994, South Africa's traditional leaders have fought for recognition, and positioned themselves...
This article examines two contradictory conceptions of customary law, as either fundamentally democr...
This study explores the limitations of recognising traditional leadership as institution through leg...
Adherents of tradition argue that customary institutions in Africa and the traditional leaders that ...
Wilmien Wicomb from the Legal Resource Centre states that the Constitution of the Republic of South ...
Drawing their power not from the ballot box but from a supposedly ancient wellspring of power, hered...
This book offers a historical analysis of the embattled structures of rural local governance in So...
South Africa is well known for the countrys model of racialized territorial government called aparth...
The article examines the possibility of creating an indigenous legal pluralism within the South Afr...
This article explores chieftaincy in democratic South Africa and particularly in KwaZulu-Natal, wher...
In the advent of the current dispensation, South Africa’s Constitution elucidates that customary law...
Democracy Compromised puts the spotlight on traditional authorities and addresses two main issues: f...
This article examines the position of traditional leaders in postapartheid South Africa. It first ...
The institution of traditional leadership represents the early form of societal organisation. It emb...
This article discusses South Africa’s phenomenon of traditional leadership which is widely ves...
Post-1994, South Africa's traditional leaders have fought for recognition, and positioned themselves...
This article examines two contradictory conceptions of customary law, as either fundamentally democr...
This study explores the limitations of recognising traditional leadership as institution through leg...
Adherents of tradition argue that customary institutions in Africa and the traditional leaders that ...
Wilmien Wicomb from the Legal Resource Centre states that the Constitution of the Republic of South ...
Drawing their power not from the ballot box but from a supposedly ancient wellspring of power, hered...
This book offers a historical analysis of the embattled structures of rural local governance in So...
South Africa is well known for the countrys model of racialized territorial government called aparth...
The article examines the possibility of creating an indigenous legal pluralism within the South Afr...
This article explores chieftaincy in democratic South Africa and particularly in KwaZulu-Natal, wher...
In the advent of the current dispensation, South Africa’s Constitution elucidates that customary law...
Democracy Compromised puts the spotlight on traditional authorities and addresses two main issues: f...
This article examines the position of traditional leaders in postapartheid South Africa. It first ...
The institution of traditional leadership represents the early form of societal organisation. It emb...
This article discusses South Africa’s phenomenon of traditional leadership which is widely ves...
Post-1994, South Africa's traditional leaders have fought for recognition, and positioned themselves...