Volume 60, Issue 2 Twenty Years of South African Constitutionalism: Constitutional Rights, Judicial Independence and the Transition to Democracy
This issue is based on the Twenty Years of South African Constitutionalism Constitutional Rights, Judicial Independence and the Transition to Democracy conference held at New York Law School in November 2014. The articles in this issue cover the areas of constitutional law, law and society, legal education, and public interest law practice.Articles
International Collaboration on IP/Access to Medicines: Birth of South Africa’s Fix the Patent Laws Campaign
BROOK J. BAKER
Civil Government Lawyers in South Africa
JONATHAN KLAAREN
Of Trials, Reparation, and Transformation in Post-Apartheid South Africa: The Making of A Common Purpose
ANDREA DURBACH
Clinical Legal Education’s Contribution to Building Constitutionalism and Democracy in South Africa: Past, Present, and Future
PEGGY MAISEL, SHAHEDA MAHOMED, and MEETALI JAIN
Legal Education in South Africa: Harmonizing the Aspirations of Transformative Constitutionalism with Our Educational Legacy
LESLEY GREENBAUM
How Should the South African Constitutional Court Approach Tensions Between Women’s Rights and Religious Rights?
JULIA L. ERNST
“The Advert Was Put Up Yesterday”: Public Participation in the Traditional Courts Bill Legislative Process
THUTO THIPE, MONICA DE SOUZA, and NOLUNDi LUWAYA