Abstract

Since 2015, the higher education sector in South Africa has been marked by protests and debates around inter alia tuition fees, language and the decolonisation of the university curriculum. Universities have increasingly been urged to present their efforts to decolonise their curricula. This begs the question whether it is possible to justify the teaching of a classic language, such as Latin, which is characterised by Eurocentrism, slavery and colonial conquests, within a climate where there is an urgency to move away from a colonised worldview. The teaching of Latin to law students particularly complicates this situation, as law is a discipline that emphasises rights, equality and social justice. The author sought to present an understanding of decolonisation that can be reconciled with critical teaching of Latin to law students. The methodology was twofold and consisted, firstly, of a literature review to present a description of the background to the decolonisation debate and the relevance of Latin to the Bachelor of Laws (LLB) curriculum. Secondly, the author elaborated on the use of texts from the Oxford Latin Course in a decolonised Latin classroom by reflecting on her own experience as a Latin student and a lecturer of law. This contribution found that Latin remains relevant for law students within a decolonised curriculum, where Latin lecturers are cognisant of social justice and contextualise the content of the module.

Highlights

  • Since the 2015 #Feesmustfall and #Rhodesmustfall protests, the decolonisation of the higher education curriculum has been placed on the agenda of many South African universities

  • This leads to the question of what relevance the study of Latin has in the LLB curriculum when a large part of the South African legal system is not based on Roman-Dutch law anymore

  • The aim of this article has been to reflect on the teaching of Latin to law students within a decolonised curriculum

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Summary

Introduction

Since the 2015 #Feesmustfall and #Rhodesmustfall protests, the decolonisation of the higher education curriculum has been placed on the agenda of many South African universities. The rest of the article is presented as follows: a brief exposition of concepts used in the decolonisation debate; a critical evaluation of the background to decolonisation; followed by concrete examples of the use of Latin texts within the law classroom in order to illustrate the (possible) value of such texts within a decolonised curriculum. This contribution is intended to initiate discourse around the instruction of Latin to law students in a decolonised curriculum

Background to the decolonisation debate
Conclusion
Full Text
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