The role of administrative law in enforcing socio-economic rights : revisiting Joseph
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Date
Authors
Murcott, Melanie
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Juta Law
Abstract
Joseph v City of Johannesburg has been both applauded by administrative lawyers, as a case in which formalism was rejected and a substantive model of administrative law adjudication was embraced, and condemned by human rights lawyers, as a case that focused on procedural fairness rather than ‘the hard rights of citizens and their plight’. I argue that because Joseph concerned a group of poor and vulnerable occupiers of an inner-city building deprived of their electricity, resulting in an inability to meet their basic needs: to cook, refrigerate their food, heat their homes, do homework, operate medical equipment, etc, Joseph is primarily a socio-economic rights case in which a requirement of the administrative law, procedural fairness, was invoked so as to protect and enforce a right to electricity. I critique the administrative law strategy invoked on behalf of the occupiers in Joseph to enforce the occupiers’ claim to have their electricity reconnected; the courts’ treatment of that strategy; and whether it is an effective and, if so, desirable tool for the enforcement of socio-economic rights in the future.
Description
This article is based on a presentation given at the Poverty and Justice Seminar that was held on 17–18 October 2012 at the University of Pretoria.
Keywords
Administrative law, Adjudication, Human rights
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Murcott, M 2013, 'The role of administrative law in enforcing socio-economic rights : revisiting Joseph', South African Journal on Human Rights, vol. 29, no. 3,, pp. 481-495.