MRL 3702 Fundamental-rights-exam-notes
FUNDAMENTAL RIGHTS: FUR2601 STUDY UNIT 1: INTRODUCTION TO THE CONSTITUTION AND THE BILL OF RIGHTS. CONSTITUTIONAL REVOLUTION: Constitutional Law used to be dominated by parliamentary sovereignty. Parliament would make any law that it wanted. The law could not be contested by courts, institutions or persons. The courts could only declare law invalid on procedural grounds (application, justiciability andjurisdiction) but not on SUBSTANTIAL (violation of human rights). Due to the State being racially divided (i.t.o 1909 Union Constitution), Parliament only represented white minority and black minority was governed by the Executive – no voting rights. INTERIM CONSTITUTION – Adopted in 1993 & Operations – 27 April 1994. The supreme law of land & fully justiciable (as opposed to those before it) and contained BOR in Chapter 3 – reflects the 1996 Constitution BOR, thus decisions made in respect thereof remain authoritative. It was transitional, set out 34 principles (contained in Schedule 4) for negotiating and drafting of the Final Constitution. It was revolutionary as it brought about a number of fundamental changes: 1) IT ENDED APARTHEID - It introduced an electoral system based on proportional representation. - ALL CITIZENS were accorded POLITICAL AND CIVIL RIGHTS. 2) REPLACED PARLIAMENTARY SOV WITH CONSTITUTIONAL SUPREMACY: - The BOR was put in place to protect human rights. - The courts were given power to declare invalid any law/conduct inconsistent withBOR / Constitution. 3) CENTRAL GOVERNMENT REPLACED BY SYSTEM OF GVT IN WHICH LEG AND EXECUTIVEPOWER WAS DIVIDED AMONG NATIONAL, PROVINCIAL AND LOCAL SPHERES OF GVT. The 1996 Constitution completes revolution – was drafted and adopted by an elected Constitutional Assembly (CA). The Interim Constitution was not a product of a democratically elected body. The CA adopted the final text on: 8 May 2006. The CC had to certify the text according to the principles in Schedule 4 of Interim & DECLINEDCertification due to inconsistencies: 1. Provincial Powers 2. Local Gvt 3. Entrenchment of BOR 4. Public Service Commission. The CA amended the text and passed on 11 October 1996 – CC passed text. The Constitution was signed into law by Nelson Mandela, 10 Dec 1996 and was effective on 7 Feb 1997. lOMoARcPSD|843 974 0 Upon completion of the certification process, 34 Principles of Interim were no longer relevant – as they were a framework for the creation of a democratic state with a supreme constitution in which the fundamental rights and freedoms of all citizens were protected, i.e. an objection to amendments to 1996 Constitution cannot be based on these principles. // Compliance & Non-compliance therewithin can never be raised again by any court – including the Constitutional Court. These principles are ONLY USED as guidelines when interpreting the Constitution’s text is ambiguous. In other words, it means that it is IMPOSSIBLE to object to amendment of the 1996 Constitution on the grounds that the amended text no longer complies with the Constitutional Principles. “The court should approach the meaning of the relevant provision of the Constitution on the basis that the meaning assigned to it by the CC in the Certification Process – is its correct interpretation and shouldn’t be departed from save in the most compelling circumstances”. THE BASIC PRINCIPLES OF THE NEW CONSTITUTIONAL ORDER: ENSHRINED: (preserved and protected) in the text: 1. Democracy 2. Supremacy 3. Rule of Law IMPLIED IN THE TEXT: *Justiciable in the sense that any law or conduct inconsistent with them maybe declared invalid. 1. Constitutionalism 2. SOP 3. Checks & Balances ENTRENCHED: 1. Fundamental Rights in BOR ABOVE PRINCIPLES: - Are justiciable – any law/conduct inconsistent therein may be declared invalid. - It ties the provisions of the Constitution together and shapes them into the framework that defines a new Constitutional order – thus, influences interpretation of many other provisions of the constitution including those of the BOR (interpretation of BOR must be consistent with them). - The basic principles must be sparingly invoked by courts when resolving legal disputes (only tobe used when more detailed provisions run out), because they are: (a) abstract foundational norms informing the interpretation of the constitution and law, but only directly relied on when the more detailed provisions run out. (b) immediate direct application. “The constitution shapes ordinary law and must inform the way legislation is drafted by the legislatures and interpreted by the courts and the way the courts develop the common law”. *As a rule – a specific provision must be applied before a general provision because it would be contrary to principles themselves (democracy and SOP) if courts were to disregard the concretization (final stage in the interpretation process) of these abstract principles in specific constitutional provisions.
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mrl 3702 fundamental rights exam notes
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fundamental rights fur2601 study unit 1 introduction to the constitution and the bill of rights constitutional revolution constitutional law used to
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