The importance of protecting and promoting human rights has, over the years, received enormous support in our legal system. Everyone, including our courts, is tasked, in one way or another, with the responsibility to protect and advance human rights, including those of the rape victim. Normally, the courts protect rape victims’ rights by determining whether their rights have been violated, and if so, will order the guilty party to, among other things, compensate the rape victim. The courts also protect the rape victims’ rightsby developing common law where it does not comply with the spirit, purport and object of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 (hereinafter “the Constitution”). When developing common law to protect ra...
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 creates a system in which there is a separati...
The South African Constitution numbers among a very few constitutions around the world which include...
“Indeed in rape cases it is the victim who is most often placed on trial rather than the perpetrator...
In Masiya v DPP the Constitutional Court missed the opportunity to address the patently inadequate a...
The Constitutional Court’s decision in Tshabalala v S; Ntuli v S 2020 2 SACR 38 CC is undoubtedly a ...
Violence against women, in particular, the crime of rape has reached epidemic status in South Africa...
Despite having one of the most inclusive and progressive constitutions in the world, South Africa (S...
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa is the supreme law, and it imposes obligations on a...
This note analyses a recent case of the European Court of Justice in which the applicant, a 14-year ...
Masiya v Director of Public Prosecutions 2007 (5) SA 30 (CC) (hereafter Masiya) is inherently contro...
LLM, North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2017The doctrine of separation of powers was establishe...
Thesis (LL.M. (Public Law))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2007Crime is a reality wit...
The role of the common law in South Africa has been controversial. Some argue that South Africa\u27s...
While section 17 of the Constitution guarantees the right to freedom of assembly, the violence that ...
The number of children being sexually violated on a daily basis continues to escalate against a back...
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 creates a system in which there is a separati...
The South African Constitution numbers among a very few constitutions around the world which include...
“Indeed in rape cases it is the victim who is most often placed on trial rather than the perpetrator...
In Masiya v DPP the Constitutional Court missed the opportunity to address the patently inadequate a...
The Constitutional Court’s decision in Tshabalala v S; Ntuli v S 2020 2 SACR 38 CC is undoubtedly a ...
Violence against women, in particular, the crime of rape has reached epidemic status in South Africa...
Despite having one of the most inclusive and progressive constitutions in the world, South Africa (S...
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa is the supreme law, and it imposes obligations on a...
This note analyses a recent case of the European Court of Justice in which the applicant, a 14-year ...
Masiya v Director of Public Prosecutions 2007 (5) SA 30 (CC) (hereafter Masiya) is inherently contro...
LLM, North-West University, Mafikeng Campus, 2017The doctrine of separation of powers was establishe...
Thesis (LL.M. (Public Law))--North-West University, Potchefstroom Campus, 2007Crime is a reality wit...
The role of the common law in South Africa has been controversial. Some argue that South Africa\u27s...
While section 17 of the Constitution guarantees the right to freedom of assembly, the violence that ...
The number of children being sexually violated on a daily basis continues to escalate against a back...
The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996 creates a system in which there is a separati...
The South African Constitution numbers among a very few constitutions around the world which include...
“Indeed in rape cases it is the victim who is most often placed on trial rather than the perpetrator...