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LJU4801 PORTFOLIO (DETAILED ANSWERS) Semester 2 2025 - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED

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LJU4801 PORTFOLIO (DETAILED ANSWERS) Semester 2 2025 - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED - DISTINCTION GUARANTEED Answers, guidelines, workings and references ,...October / November 2025 LEGAL PHILOSOPHY LJU4801 PORTFOLIO EXAMINERS: FIRST: PROF. J-H DE VILLIERS SECOND: MS. PAN NYAWO EXTERNAL: DR. Y JOOSTE (University of Pretoria) This paper consists of 7 pages. The paper counts 80 marks. The portfolio runs from 23 - 28 October 2025. PLEASE READ THE FOLLOWING INSTRUCTIONS CAREFULLY BEFORE ANSWERING THE EXAMINATION QUESTIONS. 1. This portfolio must be submitted before 20:00 on 28 October 2025 (CAT). Students have to submit this portfolio via myUnisa, therefore no e-mailed portfolios may be accepted. No extensions will be granted. It is the responsibility of the student to ensure that the file submitted is not corrupted and can be opened for marking. No scanned portfolios may be submitted. 2. You must therefore submit this portfolio as Assessment 3 via myUnisa. When you receive the portfolio, check whether your submission portal is open/available and let your lecturers know immediately if your submission portal is not open. 3.1 When ready to submit, open the Take-Home (Assignment) assessment and click on the Add Submission button. LJU4801 OCT/NOV 2025 2 3.2 Note the file requirements such as: a. File size limit. b. Number of files that can be submitted. c. File formats allowed. 3.3 Check the acknowledgment checkbox and upload your answers document and then click on the Save changes button. 3.4 Review your submission information regarding the status and click on your submission file link to check if it's correct. LJU4801 OCT/NOV 2025 3 3.5 If you need to resubmit a file, you can click on the Edit Submission button. Do not click on the Remove submission button. Note: You will need to delete any existing files by clicking on the file and then on delete. 4. The Declaration of Academic Honesty button must be clicked when submitting the portfolio examination. By ticking the Honesty Declaration, you confirm that you have read (i) the University’s Policy on Copyright Infringement and Plagiarism and the Student Disciplinary Code, which are both available on myUnisa: values and plagiarism that is found at LJU4801 OCT/NOV 2025 4 5. This is an open-book examination. You may consult your prescribed study material during the examination. 6. Proper footnote referencing must be used. This entails that every argument or idea taken from another source, or any piece of information utilised from another source, needs to be provided with a separate footnote reference. Please note that in-line referencing in the text may NOT be used. 7. When answering questions, students are expected to make use of the study guide as well as other sources relevant to the question. PLEASE DO NOT COPY AND PASTE ANSWERS FROM ANY SOURCE. When answering the questions, you must provide footnote references to the relevant source(s) for every statement made. You must make use of the Unisa School of Law referencing style. Refer to Tutorial Letter 301 and Tutorial Letter 302 under the Official Study Material tab on myUnisa. Do not make use of long quotations, rather rephrase the arguments in your own words. Short quotations must appear in quotation marks and be accompanied by a corresponding footnote reference. Unreferenced portfolio content will not be credited with marks. 8. Use proper language and grammar and make use of full sentences; no bullets or numbering are allowed. Your essays must present coherent, logical and consistent arguments. 9. Note that all portfolios will be scrutinised for plagiarism through the use of Turnitin. Any information provided that is not in your own words and properly referenced, will be flagged by Turnitin. Be reminded that Turnitin also compares all student assignment submissions to each other; instances of academic dishonesty or students copying from each other will also be identified. Instances of AI writing are also detected by Turnitin. Cases of plagiarism or academic dishonesty will be dealt with in accordance with the University's policies. Carefully consider the following pronouncement made by Nelson Mandela during his first court statement in Pretoria, 1962: Your Worship, I would say that the whole life of any thinking African in this country drives him continuously to a conflict between his conscience on the one hand and the law on the other. This is not a conflict peculiar to this country. The conflict arises for men of conscience, for men who think and who feel deeply in every country. Recently in Britain, a peer of the realm, Earl Russell, probably the most respected philosopher of the Western world, was sentenced, convicted for precisely the type of activities for which I stand before you today, for following his conscience in defiance of the law, as a protest against a nuclear weapons policy being followed by his own government. For him, his duty to the public, his belief in the morality of the essential rightness of the cause for which he stood, rose superior to this high respect for the law. He could not do other than to oppose the law and to suffer the consequences for it. Nor can I. Nor can many Africans in this country. The law as it is applied, the law as it has been developed over a long period of history, and especially the law as it is written and designed by the Nationalist government, is a law which, in our view, is immoral, unjust, and intolerable. Our consciences dictate that we must protest against it, that we must oppose it, and that we must attempt to alter it. Consider the following extract from page 1 of The Citizen newspaper, Friday 29 August 2025: The Sexual Offences Act 23 of 1957 prohibits prostitution, brothel-keeping, and other related activities. A call for the decriminalisation of sex work is currently being heard by the Western Cape High Court. Comprehensively explain the legal thinking found in the work of Mary Joe Frug to explain how both the law, generally, and the Sexual Offences Act, specifically, “encodes” the female body with meaning. Read the following scenario and then answer the question below: In South Africa, prostitution constitutes a crime in terms of the Sexual Offences Act 23 of 1957. There are divergent views on the rationale behind the criminalisation of prostitution. Some attribute the non-recognition of prostitution to the immorality of the conduct, while others are of the opinion that the law has nothing to do with the morality or immorality of the prohibited conduct. 1.1 Identify and discuss the two philosophical approaches being used here. Your answer should not exceed 750 words. (15) 1.2 According to the positivist theory of adjudication, is the South African position on prostitution based on law or immorality? Discuss. Your answer should not exceed 750 words. (15) [30] Question 2 Read the following scenario and then answer the questions below: In 1931, the then Appellate Division heard the case of Collett v Priest 1931 AD 290. Mr Collett lodged an appeal against the judgment which placed his estate under sequestration. In the course of its judgment, the court remarked as follows: [301] “…great as is the respect which this Court entertains for the opinion of so eminent a judge, we cannot allow reasons of that kind to override an unbroken series of decisions in this Court, unless clearly shown to be wrong. Stare decisis is a sound principle and one which has been adopted in South African practice. No reason has been adduced either by the learned JUDGE PRESIDENT or by Counsel for appellant, for reversing the decisions of this Court on the matter before us.” 2.1 From the objectivist theories’ perspective, judges are part of a community of interpreters and this community determines how judges must decide cases. Discuss what this perspective entails. In your discussion, refer to Dworkin’s communalist theory. Your answer should not exceed 500 words. (10)judicial precedent (stare decisis) resonates with the notion that judges are constrained in their decision-making by the community of interpreters. Your answer should not exceed 500 words. (10) [20] Question 3 Read the following scenario and then answer the question below: In the case of S v Maluleke 2008 (1) SACR 49 (T) the court said the following: [24] “…a suitable sentence could be imposed that also created an opportunity to begin to heal the wounds that the commission of the crime caused to the family of the deceased and to the community at large.” AND [25] “The particular circumstances of this case created the opportunity to introduce the principles of restorative justice into the sentencing process.” FURTHERMORE [26] “Restorative justice… emphasises the need for reparation, healing and rehabilitation rather than harsher sentences….” 3.1 Discuss how the court’s remarks resonate with notion of communitarianism and reconciliation, which are central to African legal philosophy. Your answer should not exceed 1250 words. (25) Question 4 4.1 Discuss the four main ideas that form the basis for critical legal theory. Your answer should not exceed 750 words. (15) 4.2 Consider Mandela’s pronouncement in light of the persistent debate in legal philosophy that pertains to the relationship between law and morality. Extensively discuss the debate and expressly situate Mandela’s statement in relation to the debate Mary Joe Frug argues that the law “encodes” the female body with meaning. Briefly discuss how the law mandates the sexualisation of the female body. Your answer should not exceed 500 words. (10) Despite its centrality in the African context, the concept of uBuntu has not escaped criticisms. Read the following article that is available on the module site under the Additional Resources tab, and then answer the question below:Consider the following scenario and then answer the questions below: A judge is confronted with a novel case concerning online bullying. X stands accused of relentlessly bullying Y on various social media platforms. There is no clear, single legal principle to guide the judge in reaching a decision. Jan-Harm de Villiers, ‘Prolegomenon on the Role of the Polyphonic Novel for (Animal) Law:Explain how the judge will go about reaching a decision if he follows the approach suggested by Ronald Dworkin. J.M. Coetzee’s The Lives of Animals, the Voice of Refusal, and the Subversive Performativity of the Novel’ (2019) 31 Law & Literature 443. Explain the four ideas that form the basis for critical theory and, drawing on arguments andHow will a judge decide the case if he follows an African legal philosophical approach to adjudication? theoretical inventions from the article, explain why the article can be seen as a work of critical theory. Discuss the criticisms that have been levelled against uBuntu and indicate whether you agree or disagree with each of the criticisms. You must substantiate your position by relying on relevant sources. Your Worship, I would say that the whole life of any thinking African in this country drives him continuously to a conflict between his conscience on the one hand and the law on the other. This is not a conflict peculiar to this country. The conflict arises for men of conscience, for men who think and who feel deeply in every country. Recently in Britain, a peer of the realm, Earl Russell, probably the most respected philosopher of the Western world, was sentenced, convicted for precisely the type of activities for which I stand before you today, for following his conscience in defiance of the law, as a protest against a nuclear weapons policy being followed by his own government. For him, his duty to the public, his belief in the morality of the essential rightness of the cause for which he stood, rose superior to this high respect for the law. He could not do other than to oppose the law and to suffer the consequences for it. Nor can I. Nor can many Africans in this country. The law as it is applied, the law as it has been developed over a long period of history, and especially the law as it is written and designed by the Nationalist government, is a law which, in our view, is immoral, unjust, and intolerable. Our consciences dictate that we must protest against it, that we must oppose it, and that we must attempt to alter it. Consider the following extract from page 1 of The Citizen newspaper, Friday 29 August 2025: The Sexual Offences Act 23 of 1957 prohibits prostitution, brothel-keeping, and other related activities. A call for the decriminalisation of sex work is currently being heard by the Western Cape High Court. Comprehensively explain the legal thinking found in the work of Mary Joe Frug to explain how both the law, generally, and the Sexual Offences Act, specifically, “encodes” the female body with meaning. Read the following scenario and then answer the question below: In South Africa, prostitution constitutes a crime in terms of the Sexual Offences Act 23 of 1957. There are divergent views on the rationale behind the criminalisation of prostitution. Some attribute the non-recognition of prostitution to the immorality of the conduct, while others are of the opinion that the law has nothing to do with the morality or immorality of the prohibited conduct. 1.1 Identify and discuss the two philosophical approaches being used here. Your answer should not exceed 750 words. (15) 1.2 According to the positivist theory of adjudication, is the South African position on prostitution based on law or immorality? Discuss. Your answer should not exceed 750 words. (15) [30] Question 2 Read the following scenario and then answer the questions below: In 1931, the then Appellate Division heard the case of Collett v Priest 1931 AD 290. Mr Collett lodged an appeal against the judgment which placed his estate under sequestration. In the course of its judgment, the court remarked as follows: [301] “…great as is the respect which this Court entertains for the opinion of so eminent a judge, we cannot allow reasons of that kind to override an unbroken series of decisions in this Court, unless clearly shown to be wrong. Stare decisis is a sound principle and one which has been adopted in South African practice. No reason has been adduced either by the learned JUDGE PRESIDENT or by Counsel for appellant, for reversing the decisions of this Court on the matter before us.” 2.1 From the objectivist theories’ perspective, judges are part of a community of interpreters and this community determines how judges must decide cases. Discuss what this perspective entails. In your discussion, refer to Dworkin’s communalist theory. Your answer should not exceed 500 words. (10)judicial precedent (stare decisis) resonates with the notion that judges are constrained in their decision-making by the community of interpreters. Your answer should not exceed 500 words. (10) [20] Question 3 Read the following scenario and then answer the question below: In the case of S v Maluleke 2008 (1) SACR 49 (T) the court said the following: [24] “…a suitable sentence could be imposed that also created an opportunity to begin to heal the wounds that the commission of the crime caused to the family of the deceased and to the community at large.” AND [25] “The particular circumstances of this case created the opportunity to introduce the principles of restorative justice into the sentencing process.” FURTHERMORE [26] “Restorative justice… emphasises the need for reparation, healing and rehabilitation rather than harsher sentences….” 3.1 Discuss how the court’s remarks resonate with notion of communitarianism and reconciliation, which are central to African legal philosophy. Your answer should not exceed 1250 words. (25) Question 4 4.1 Discuss the four main ideas that form the basis for critical legal theory. Your answer should not exceed 750 words. (15) 4.2 Consider Mandela’s pronouncement in light of the persistent debate in legal philosophy that pertains to the relationship between law and morality. Extensively discuss the debate and expressly situate Mandela’s statement in relation to the debate Mary Joe Frug argues that the law “encodes” the female body with meaning. Briefly discuss how the law mandates the sexualisation of the female body. Your answer should not exceed 500 words. (10) Despite its centrality in the African context, the concept of uBuntu has not escaped criticisms. Read the following article that is available on the module site under the Additional Resources tab, and then answer the question below:Consider the following scenario and then answer the questions below: A judge is confronted with a novel case concerning online bullying. X stands accused of relentlessly bullying Y on various social media platforms. There is no clear, single legal principle to guide the judge in reaching a decision. Jan-Harm de Villiers, ‘Prolegomenon on the Role of the Polyphonic Novel for (Animal) Law:Explain how the judge will go about reaching a decision if he follows the approach suggested by Ronald Dworkin. J.M. Coetzee’s The Lives of Animals, the Voice of Refusal, and the Subversive Performativity of the Novel’ (2019) 31 Law & Literature 443. Explain the four ideas that form the basis for critical theory and, drawing on arguments andHow will a judge decide the case if he follows an African legal philosophical approach to adjudication? theoretical inventions from the article, explain why the article can be seen as a work of critical theory. Discuss the criticisms that have been levelled against uBuntu and indicate whether you agree or disagree with each of the criticisms. You must substantiate your position by relying on relevant sources. Read less

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LJU4801
PORTFOLIO Semester 2 2025

Due Date: 28 October 2025

Detailed solutions, explanations, workings
and references.

+27 81 278 3372

, QUESTION 1

Nelson Mandela‟s 1962 courtroom statement captures one of the deepest questions
in legal philosophy, whether law and morality must go hand-in-hand. His words
highlight the inner turmoil of a person whose conscience compels him to resist an
unjust legal system. Mandela‟s view fits within the long-standing debate between
natural law theory, which sees morality as central to legal validity, and legal
positivism, which separates law from morality. His experience under apartheid is a
real-life example of how this debate is not only theoretical but also has personal,
ethical, and political consequences.

Natural Law

Natural law theory teaches that a law is only valid if it aligns with moral values that
are universal, unchanging, and eternal. This belief goes back to ancient Greek
philosophers like Plato and Aristotle. Plato believed the law should reflect higher
ideals, while Aristotle spoke of natural justice that binds all people, regardless of
legal systems. These thinkers saw natural law as the yardstick against which human
laws must be measured. If a law contradicts this ideal, it is not a real law.1

During the medieval period, thinkers such as Augustine and Thomas Aquinas
expanded on this. Aquinas taught that God‟s eternal law is revealed to humans
through reason and scripture. Human-made laws must reflect this moral code; if not,
they are seen as corrupt.2 This idea continued into modern legal theory with scholars
like Grotius and Blackstone, who both held that moral principles must guide the law.3

Mandela‟s statement reflects this view. He describes apartheid laws as “immoral,
unjust, and intolerable.” His conscience, shaped by moral reasoning, told him that
these laws were not just wrong but not law at all in the moral sense. He aligns with
natural law thinkers who say unjust laws are not valid laws.4




1
IJ Kroeze, Legal Philosophy: Only study guide for LJU4801 (University of South
Africa 2017) 63.
2
ibid 70–72.
3
ibid 73; see also W Blackstone, Commentaries on the Laws of England (London: Cavendish 2001)
Intro 2.39.
4
Kroeze, Legal Philosophy 76


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