BLA Student Chapter - Howard College

BLA Student Chapter - Howard College

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Black Lawyers Association African Business, October 1977. When they first met in 1976, it was primarily to fight the Group Areas permit system and prosecutions.

HISTORY OF THE BLA

"Government’s move this month to oust black attorneys from white trading areas has shocked the business and professional sectors. Coming at a time of the government’s publicised new initiative on alleviating restrictions, the banning notices served on black attorneys in terms of the Group Area Act, has left a sour taste. And the belated offer to deal with each case on merit fro

VACANCY - Equal Education Law Centre 08/02/2019

VACANCY - Equal Education Law Centre The Equal Education Law Centre is opening a call for applications to social justice lawyers for a 5-month paid litigation internship beginning 1 March 2019.

Law Society of South Africa 03/09/2015

PRESS RELEASE
2 September 2015: For immediate release


LAW SOCIETY EXPRESSES SADNESS AT THE PASSING OF JUSTICE THEMBILE SKWEYIYA


The Law Society of South Africa (LSSA) joins the Presidency and the Office of the Chief Justice in expressing its sadness at the passing of retired Constitutional Court Justice Thembile Skweyiya.

‘We echo the words of the Chief Justice that Justice Skweyiya – who started his legal career as a member of our profession in 1968 – went on to serve the nation with great distinction as an anti-apartheid practitioner, advocate, Judge of the High Court as well as a Justice of the Constitutional Court,’ say LSSA Co-Chairpersons Busani Mabunda and Richard Scott.

They add: ‘Justice Skweyiya has been widely regarded as the first African to obtain silk in South Africa. He practised as an advocate not only in the commercial sphere but increasingly in political, human rights and civil liberties matters, and represented South Africans across the ideological political spectrum who had been arrested and detained for opposing a racist and oppressive regime. Through his thirteen-year tenure (two as an Acting Judge) on the Constitutional Court Bench, Justice Skweyiya made an impact on the body of constitutional jurisprudence and indeed made significant and bold contributions to the development of our constitutional democracy.’

In fact, his 2009 judgment in Leon Joseph and Others v City of Johannesburg and Others was described as an exciting development in South African jurisprudence which in effect broadened the scope of application of administrative law procedural fairness to apply to decisions related to the public law duty of the State to provide basic services effectively, efficiently and fairly and the concomitant public law right of people to receive those services in that manner. Some hailed this decision as signaling the re-emergence of the value of Ubuntu in the relationship between the government and its citizens.

His words to law students at the Fort Hare University, where he was Chancellor, should serve as a guide to all lawyers: ‘We should all be proud of the strength and independence of our judiciary. It is this independence which allows us all – judges, magistrates and lawyers – to uphold the rights of South Africans.’He reminded us that the Constitution not only tells us what the law must be, it also tells us what kind of lawyers and jurists we must be:
‘To be a lawyer in South Africa today you must act with integrity, and in doing so you will ensure that the judiciary remains independent and that the rule of law remains…To be a lawyer in South Africa today means that you are committed to this ideal – that you will play your part in creating a democratic society where every person can realize the rights protected in the Bill of Rights.’

Indeed, Justice Skweyiya was such a lawyer and such as a judge.

We express the deep condolences of the attorneys’ profession to his wife, Ms Sayo Nomakhosi Skweyiya, his children and grandchildren, and close friends.


ISSUED ON BEHALF OF THE CO-CHAIRPERSONS OF THE LAW SOCIETY OF SOUTH AFRICA, BUSANI MABUNDA AND RICHARD SCOTT
by the Law Society of South Africa Communication Department
Tel: (012) 366 8800 or Website: www.LSSA.org.za
Contact: Barbara Whittle, Communication Manager, [email protected] (012) 366 8800 or 083 380 1307

Law Society of South Africa The Law Society of South Africa (LSSA) brings together its six constituent members - the Black Lawyers Association, the Cape Law Society, the KwaZulu-Natal Law Society, the Law Society of the Free State, the Law Society of the Northern Provinces and the N

17/12/2013

Public Protector has power to take remedial action

'There is no reason to anticipate anything other than a legally sound outcome to the Nkandla debacle.

There are prima facie indications of criminality in the preliminary report. If the Public Protector is wrong in her findings, she can be taken on review in the High Court; if she is right, criminal, administrative and civil consequences could and should flow from her findings. Otherwise "an indispensable constitutional guarantee" will be lost.' These remarks, by Paul Hoffman SC, of the Institute for Accountability in SA, are in response to Advocate Thuli Madonsela's earlier comments that 'as an office we do not have coercive powers but we do have persuasive powers that encourage implementation of our recommendations'. In an analysis on the Mail & Guardian Online site, Hoffman quotes extensively from the unanimous judgment by SCA Judge Robert Nugent in The Public Protector v Mail & Guardian Ltd and Others, which he says shows that the power of the Public Protector to 'take appropriate remedial action' goes far beyond merely speaking truth to power on behalf of complainants in the form of 'recommendations'. Says Hoffman: 'Our independent and impartial courts of law are available both to the Public Protector and to those who complain successfully to her about maladministration of all kinds. In some instances, the facts uncovered in the investigation of the Public Protector can most appropriately be taken further by referring her reports to the police and prosecution authorities. In others administrative action is appropriate as, for example, when the Competition Commission may need to investigate a cartel. In still others the machinery of the civil law may be most conveniently used to bring about a just outcome.'
Full analysis on the Mail & Guardian Online site
The Public Protector v Mail & Guardian Ltd and Others (422/10)

Photos 29/04/2012

The attendees

Photos 29/04/2012

The Panelists

25/04/2012

The BLA Student Chapter hosted a successful discussion forum today tittled: "18 years of: the role of student organisations in the struggle for quality education"...Watch this space,bigger programs are on the way..........TRANSFORMATION IN THE LEGAL FRATERNITY!

17/02/2012

Who's going to Barkers Attorneys for the placement programme??? Million Zar Question!

09/02/2012

BLA Student Chapter. When all is said and done.

26/09/2011

TAKE A FIRST YEAR TO WORK:

Congratulations to Zandile, Naveshree, Arthur and Musa, the four students that got selected to be a part of the program this year. Today was their first day and I'm sure they had a great time. Many thanks to Norton Rose and Adams and Adams for hosting the students this year!

Aluta Continua!

15/09/2011

Advanced Trial Advocacy Workshop....We need two Fourth or Third year students to participate...e-mail: [email protected] if interested!

14/09/2011

"So as a prelude whites must be made to realise that they are only human, not superior. Same with Blacks. They must be made to realise that they are also human, not inferior" Steve Biko

10/09/2011

"Tradition has it that whenever a group of people has tasted the lovely fruits of wealth, security and prestige it begins to find it more comfortable to believe in the obvious lie and accept that it alone is entitled to privilege." Steve Biko

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Location

Telephone

Address


Room 206, Student Union Building/UKZN Howard College
Durban
4041

Opening Hours

Monday 09:00 - 18:00
Tuesday 09:00 - 18:00
Wednesday 09:00 - 18:00
Thursday 09:00 - 18:00
Friday 09:00 - 18:00