Abstract

The (sometimes fragile) balance between South Africa's constitutional obligations to protect and promote human rights in the international arena and the realities of political practice is the focus of this paper. The Constitution provides for solid dualist mechanisms and procedures for parliamentary oversight of the executive's conduct in the governance of international relations, including the conclusion of treaties. There is, however, a congenital constitutional flaw in the oversight instrumentation of the Constitution: the president is endowed with practically unfettered control over cabinet, and through the cabinet and the parliamentary caucus, he has indirect but firm control over parliament. Consequently, parliamentary oversight of international relations is severely challenged, effectively leaving it to the minority parties, civil society and the courts.
 This paper assesses the effectiveness of the protection of international human rights in South Africa by constitutional means. It begins by setting out the constitutional foundations that were designed to provide the desired protection and the place of international law in the South African legal order. This is followed by a description of the impact of political reality on the implementation of the constitutional oversight mechanisms.
 Due to the justiciability of government conduct under the Constitution, parliamentary oversight of executive conduct in the international sphere has largely taken the form of judicial review. In this, the courts have performed very well. This emerges from a concise overview of some key cases in which the courts developed sound principles and delivered strong judgments about the government's failures to maintain the required constitutional standards in its international relations. The cases show a sensitivity on the part of the courts to avoid judicial overreach, while taking up the responsibility to uphold constitutionalism.
 While the courts' stabilising interventions must be applauded, the executive tendency to flout its constitutional responsibilities remains a cause for concern.

Highlights

  • Due to the justiciability of government conduct under the Constitution, parliamentary oversight of executive conduct in the international sphere has largely taken the form of judicial review

  • The balance between South Africa's constitutional obligations to protect and promote human rights in the international arena and the realities of political practice is the focus of this paper

  • The courts have performed very well. This emerges from a concise overview of some key cases in which the courts developed sound principles and delivered strong judgments about the government's failures to maintain the required constitutional standards in its international relations

Read more

Summary

Introduction1

In constitutional terms the South African Parliament has final control over the ratification of international treaties and the country's withdrawal therefrom. A survey of the realities of South African constitutional life and the jurisprudence of the courts regarding international law reveals a dissonance between the constitutional ideals and governmental practice when it comes to parliamentary oversight of the ratification of and withdrawal from treaties Against this background a review of the interplay between the South African national executive, Parliament and the judiciary as it is governed by the provisions of the Constitution is enlightening. South Africa participates in the activities of the SADC Regional Investment Policy Framework project, in the OECD African Development Bank (AfDB) Initiative to Support Business Integrity and Anti-Bribery Efforts in Africa, in the annual International Economic Forum on Africa and the African Economic Outlook It is an Associate in the Base Erosion and Profit Shifting (BEPS) project and a key and active member of the Inclusive Framework for BEPS Implementation Steering Group, feeding its own perspectives into the BEPS process as well as supporting the efforts of developing countries to provide input through the African Tax Administration Forum (ATAF) Technical Committee." 16 OECD Working Group on Bribery 2008 http://www.oecd.org/ dataoecd/51/30/40883135.pdf (hereinafter the "WGB Report 2008"). South Africa's history with the International Criminal Court (ICC) aptly reveals contradictions in the country's and the governing ANC's attitude

19 See eg Jeffery BEE
Addressing the gaps and the obstacles
Literature
Full Text
Published version (Free)

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call