1st Edition

Lawfare and Judicial Legitimacy The Judicialisation of Politics in the case of South Africa

By Kate Dent Copyright 2024
274 Pages
by Routledge

274 Pages
by Routledge

274 Pages
by Routledge

Lawfare is a complex and evolving concept with many permutations. It is a term that is used to describe both a judicialisation of politics where the Constitutional Court is called upon to uphold constitutional responsibilities, compensating for institutional failures in the broader democratic space, and instances where there is abuse of the legal process to escape accountability. When the court... Read more

Preface

1 Introduction

Lawfare and its permutations

Lawfare in the international space

Lawfare by insurgents

Lawfare as a tool of authoritarianism

Lawfare and the judicialisation of politics in South Africa

Dominant party democracy

The Constitutional Court’s unsettled role

This book’s approach

Constitutional resilience

2 The multiple dimensions of judicial legitimacy

Concepts of legitimacy

Political legitimacy

Sociological legitimacy

Legal legitimacy

Moral legitimacy

Conflict and interconnections

Legitimacy and judicial-political dynamics

Conclusion

3 The judicialisation of politics

The “political”

The institutional heritage of the legalisation of politics

Reasons for judicialisation

The nature of a Constitutional Court

Constitutional patriotism

Constitutional design

Rights culture

Administrative justice weaknesses

Undoing unlawfulness unlawfully

Abdication and institutional failings

Institutional power imbalances

Acquiescence to judicial power

Making a distinction

Conclusion

4 Consequences of judicialisation

Political attack

Separation of powers, relationships and conversations

Backlash, curtailment and judicial retreat

Dominance and dysfunction

Abusive constitutionalism

Judicialisation of politics and declining dominance

Impunified disregard

Conclusion

5 Politicisation of law: The judicial view

Judicialisation of politics: effect on the judicial environment

Enfolding the lower courts

Judicial appointment

Acting judges

Commissions of inquiry

Pervading influence, depleting responsibility

Shifting blame

Conclusion

6 The difficulty in achieving judicial effectiveness in a judicialised climate

Non-compliance

Conditions of effectiveness

Judicialisation and the political salience of the case

Clear legal authority

Division and dissent

Remedial action in institutional suits

Authoritative legitimacy

Conclusion

7 Tracing the legitimacy of intervention strategies

Operating in hostility

The formalist response

Detachment

Responsiveness

Judicial statesmanship, responsiveness and the rule of law

Judicial review and democratic legitimacy

Holding public power to account

The legitimacy of intervention

The judicial response to lawfare tactics

Conclusion

8 The Office of the Public Protector and the Court: A wicked problem case study

Nkandla

The effect of the CC’s Nkandla Judgment

State capture

Unintended consequences

Personal cost orders and a motion of no confidence

Analysis

Conclusion

9 Conclusion

Where things stand

The South African crucible

Laws authority

From “illegitimacy” to legitimacy

From legitimacy back to illegitimacy

Judicialisation and identity politics

The only sure bulwark

Bibliography

Index

Biography

Kate Dent received her doctorate from the School of Law, University of Cape Town, South Africa.

'The judicialisation of politics carries a risk of weakening the independence of, and public respect for, the judiciary. This book contains a clear and accessible exposition of this important topic. It deserves the urgent attention of all interested in politics and justice in South Africa - both lawyers and laypeople.'

Richard Goldstone, Former Justice of the Constitutional Court of South Africa 

'In this work the author conducts the first major analysis of the current "weaponization" of the judiciary. Though her analysis is largely focused on the South African judicial system, Dent applies a comparative approach that is very helpful to readers in the United State, the United Kingdom and elsewhere. In each of these systems political questions are increasingly being presented to judges and political pressures on courts as institutions for resolving extremely difficult political impasse are escalating. The book is highly recommended reading for jurists, lawyers and policy makers.'

Lawrence Baxter, Distinguished Professor Emeritus, Duke University'

'Kate Dent’s analysis of lawfare in the judicial setting is extraordinarily original and constitutes an extremely important contribution to the scholarship of this phenomena. Though her discussion is set in the context of the South African judiciary, it has obvious implications for other jurisdictions. I highly recommend her book to anyone wanting to understand how law might be employed in the 21st century.'

                                                      Charles J. Dunlap, Jr., Major General, USAF (Ret.), Executive Director, Center on Law, Ethics and National Security, and Professor of the Practice of Law, Duke University School of Law