The Constitutional Court’s judgment in the SADC Tribunal case : international law continues to befuddle
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Date
Authors
Tladi, Dire
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
NISC (Pty) Ltd
Abstract
This article considers the Constitutional Court judgment in the SADC
Tribunal judgment from the perspective of the methodology of international law. The
judgment came to the conclusion that the President’s conduct in participating in the
SADC’s decisions to remove its Tribunal’s jurisdiction over complaints from individuals
was unlawful and unconstitutional. This conclusion was based on two international
law propositions: first, on the proposition that the SADC decisions were in breach of
international law; second, that the decisions of SADC can be imputed to the South African
government. The article shows that the judgment does not apply the methodology of
international law in arriving at these propositions. It argues that in keeping with South
Africa’s reputation as a having an ‘international law-friendly’ framework, our pinnacle
Court should do more to respect the methodology of international law.
Description
Keywords
Methodology of international law, Relation between international law and domestic law, SADC Tribunal, State responsibility, Treaty interpretation, Southern African Development Community (SADC)
Sustainable Development Goals
Citation
Tladi, D. 2020, 'The Constitutional Court's judgment in the SADC Tribunal case : international law continues to befuddle', Constitutional Court Review, vol. 10, pp.129–153.