Assignment 2
Semester 2 2025
Due September 2025
, LCP4804
Assignment 2
Semester 2 2025
Due September 2025
Nature and Concept of African Law (Customary Law)
African Customary Law, particularly within the South African context, refers to the
uncodified legal systems historically developed and practiced by indigenous
communities across the continent, with origins rooted in pre-colonial traditions.
It is fundamentally communal in nature, prioritizing collective rights, family obligations,
and social harmony over purely individual entitlements. Its regulatory scope includes
marriage, inheritance, land tenure, succession, and dispute resolution.
Unlike Western common law, which is largely codified, written, and individualistic,
customary law is predominantly oral, flexible, and adaptive, deriving its authority from
long-standing customs, practices, and usages regarded as binding within the
community.
In South Africa, its development was profoundly affected by colonial distortions, where it
was subordinated to Western legal frameworks and codified in rigid, “official” forms for
administrative convenience. This stands in contrast to its “living” form, which reflects
actual and evolving community practices.
The concept reflects a holistic worldview, integrating spiritual, social, and economic
dimensions, with ubuntu (the principle of human interconnectedness and mutual
respect) serving as a core foundation in many Southern African systems.
Historically, customary law was marginalized under colonialism and filtered through the
“repugnancy clause,” which invalidated rules deemed contrary to European moral