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The Politics of Principle
The First South African Constitutional Court, 1995–2005

Uses a single-country case study to enrich research on the role of constitutional courts in new democracies.

Theunis Roux (Author)

9781107013643, Cambridge University Press

Hardback, published 28 March 2013

450 pages, 4 b/w illus.
23.1 x 15.2 x 2.8 cm, 0.77 kg

'The Politics of Principle is a landmark book for those interested in South African politics, history, law, and the interaction between these disciplines.' Athanasia Hadjigeorgiou, Global Law Books (www.globallawbooks.org/home.asp)

Under its first chief justice, Arthur Chaskalson, the South African Constitutional Court built an unrivalled reputation in the comparative constitutional law community for technically accomplished and morally enlightened decision-making. At the same time, the Court proved remarkably effective in asserting its institutional role in post-apartheid politics. While each of these accomplishments is noteworthy in its own right, the Court's simultaneous success in legal and political terms demands separate investigation. Drawing on and synthesising various insights from judicial politics and legal theory, this study offers an interdisciplinary explanation for the Chaskalson Court's achievement. Rather than a purely political strategy of the kind modelled by rational choice theorists, the study argues that the Court's achievement is attributable to a series of adjudicative strategies in different areas of law. In combination, these strategies allowed the Court to satisfy institutional norms of public reason-giving while at the same time avoiding political attack.

Introduction
1. The Chaskalson Court's achievement
2. A conceptual framework for assessing the performance of constitutional courts in interdisciplinary terms
3. Operationalising the conceptual framework to explain the Court's achievement
4. The political context for judicial review, 1995–2005
5. Constraints and opportunities: the law/politics distinction in South African legal-professional culture
6. Death, desire and discrimination: the Chaskalson Court between constitutional and positive morality
7. Social rights
8. Property rights
9. Political rights
10. Cross-cutting strategies
11. Conclusion.

Subject Areas: Constitutional & administrative law [LND], Comparative politics [JPB], African history [HBJH]

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