Testing the judiciary's appetite to reimagine protest law: A case note on the SJC10 case

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DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17159/2413-3108/2018/i63a4509

Abstract

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 note dissects some of the key arguments raised by the SJC and by the state, and analyses the court’s reasoning in reaching this finding.

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Author Biography

Jameelah Omar, University of Cape Town

LLB, LLM (Criminal Justice), UCT; Lecturer, Public Law, University of Cape Town

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Published

2018-03-30

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Case notes