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{{Short description|South African judge (1934–2024)}}
'''Lourens''' ''(Laurie)'' '''Wepener Hugo Ackermann''' (b [[14 January]] [[1934 in South Africa|1934]]) is one of the four [[judge]]s appointed to the [[Constitutional Court of South Africa]].
{{Use dmy dates|date=April 2022}}
{{Infobox officeholder
| birth_name = Lourens Wepener Hugo Ackermann
| birth_date = {{birth date|df=y|1934|01|14}}
| birth_place = [[Pretoria]], [[Transvaal province|Transvaal]]<br />[[Union of South Africa]]
| death_date = {{death date and age|df=y|2024|05|25|1934|01|14}}
| death_place = [[Cape Town]], South Africa
| office = [[Constitutional Court of South Africa|Justice of the Constitutional Court]]
| term_start = August 1994
| term_end = January 2004
| appointer = [[Nelson Mandela]]
| office1 = [[Supreme Court of South Africa|Judge of the Supreme Court]]
| 1blankname1 = Division
| 1namedata1 = [[Cape Provincial Division|Cape Provincial]]
| term_start1 = January 1993
| term_end1 = August 1994
| term_start2 = October 1980
| term_end2 = September 1987
| 1blankname2 = Division
| 1namedata2 = [[Transvaal Provincial Division|Transvaal Provincial]]
| spouse = {{marriage|Denise Ackermann|1958}}
| alma_mater = [[Stellenbosch University]]<br />[[Worcester College, Oxford]]
| education = [[Pretoria Boys High School]]
}}


Ackermann was born in [[Pretoria]], [[South Africa]] and studied law at [[Stellenbosch University|Stellenbosch]] and [[Oxford University|Oxford Universities]]. Laurie served on the [[Lesotho]] Court of Appeal from [[1988 in South Africa|1988]] to [[1992 in South Africa|1992]] and as the [[Namibia]]n Supreme Court's acting judge of appeal from [[1991 in South Africa|1991]] to [[1992 in South Africa|1992]]. He is married to Denise and has three children.
'''Lourens''' '''Wepener Hugo "Laurie" Ackermann''' (14 January 1934 25 May 2024) was a South African judge who served on the [[Constitutional Court of South Africa]] from 1994 to 2004. Appointed to the inaugural court by [[Nelson Mandela]], he is best known for his jurisprudence on [[dignity]]. He was formerly an academic, a practising [[Advocates in South Africa|advocate]], and a judge of the [[Supreme Court of South Africa]].


Born in [[Pretoria]], Ackermann practised at the Pretoria Bar between 1958 and 1980, gaining [[Senior counsel|silk status]] in 1975. He served as a judge in the [[Transvaal Provincial Division]] of the Supreme Court between 1980 and 1987, when he resigned due to his opposition to [[apartheid]] legislation. After five years as a professor in [[human rights law]] at [[Stellenbosch University]], he returned to the Supreme Court in 1993, sitting in the [[Cape Provincial Division]] until he was elevated to the Constitutional Court in August 1994. He retired from the judiciary in January 2004.
[[Category:1934 births|Ackermann, Lourens]]

[[Category:Living people|Ackermann, Lourens]]
== Early life and education ==
[[Category:South African judges|Ackermann, Lourens]]
Ackermann was born on 14 January 1934 in [[Pretoria]] in the former [[Transvaal (province)|Transvaal]].<ref name=":5">{{Cite journal |date=April 1981 |title=Professional news: Mr Justice L W H Ackermann |url=https://journals.co.za/doi/pdf/10.10520/AJA02500329_3891 |journal=De Rebus |pages=161}}</ref> Both of his parents were [[Afrikaners]], but he was raised bilingual.'''<ref name=":1">{{Cite book |last=Klaaren |first=Jonathan |title=Making the Road by Walking: The Evolution of the South African Constitution |date=2012 |publisher=Pretoria University Law Press |isbn=978-1920538750 |pages=27–43 |language=en |chapter=The Constitutionalist Concept of Justice L. Ackermann: Evolution by Revolution |access-date=2023-12-16 |chapter-url=https://search.worldcat.org/title/1029755423}}</ref>''' He matriculated from [[Pretoria Boys High School]] in 1950 and attended [[Stellenbosch University]], where he completed a [[Bachelor of Arts]] in law in 1953.<ref name=":5" /> In 1954, he went to [[University of Oxford|Oxford University]] as the Cape [[Rhodes Scholar]], reading for a Bachelor of Arts in [[jurisprudence]]. Thereafter he returned to Stellenbosch University to complete his [[LLB]] in 1957.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":0">{{Cite web |date= |title=Justice Laurie Ackermann |url=http://www.constitutionalcourt.org.za/site/judges/justicelwhackermann/index1.html |archive-url=https://web.archive.org/web/20060107144228/http://www.constitutionalcourt.org.za/site/judges/justicelwhackermann/index1.html |archive-date=2006-01-07 |access-date=2023-12-16 |website=Constitutional Court of South Africa}}</ref>
[[Category:People from Pretoria|Ackermann, L]]

== Apartheid-era career ==
In the first half of 1958, Ackermann clerked for Justice [[Faure Williamson]] of the [[Supreme Court of South Africa]].<ref name=":5" /> Then, between 1958 and 1980, he practised as an [[advocate]] at the Pretoria Bar.<ref name=":0" /> He gained [[Senior counsel|silk status]] in 1975 and served stints on the Pretoria Bar Council and the General Council of the Bar. He first acted as a judge in August 1976, and in October 1980 he was permanently appointed to the bench of the [[Transvaal Provincial Division]] of the Supreme Court of South Africa.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":0" /> During this period, he was also the national vice-president of the National Institute for the Prevention of Crime and the Rehabilitation of Offenders.<ref name=":0" />

In September 1987, he retired from the bench in order to take up an academic appointment at his alma mater, becoming the Harry Oppenheimer Chair in Human Rights Law at Stellenbosch University.<ref name=":0" /> The chair was newly established with an endowment from the [[Harry Oppenheimer|Oppenheimer Foundation]], and his students included future legal scholar [[Pierre de Vos]].<ref name=":2">{{Cite journal |last=De Vos |first=Pierre |author-link=Pierre de Vos |date=2008 |title=From Heteronormativity to Full Sexual Citizenship: Equality and Sexual Freedom in Laurie Ackermann's Constitutional Jurisprudence |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/actj2008&id=268&div=&collection= |journal=Acta Juridica |volume=2008 |pages=254}}</ref> Ackermann later said that he left the bench when, partly due to the influence of [[human rights law]] expert [[Louis Henkin]], he came to endorse a "total rejection of [[apartheid]]" and of the [[Parliamentary sovereignty|sovereignty]] of the apartheid-era [[House of Assembly (South Africa)|Parliament]].<ref name=":1" /> According to Ackermann, he was forced to resign because State President [[P. W. Botha]] would not permit him to take early retirement.<ref name=":1" />

He held his position at Stellenbosch until the end of 1992, and during that time he was a visiting scholar at [[Columbia University]] and the [[Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International Law|Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law]].<ref name=":0" /> He also served on the highest courts of two neighbouring countries: he was a judge of the [[Lesotho Court of Appeal]] from 1988 to 1992 and an acting judge on the [[Namibian Supreme Court]] from 1991 to 1992.'''<ref name=":1" />'''

In January 1993, during the [[Negotiations to end apartheid in South Africa|negotiations to end apartheid]], Ackermann accepted reappointment to the South African Supreme Court, now in the [[Cape Provincial Division]]. He chaired the Cape Electoral Appeal Tribunal during the [[1994 South African general election|first post-apartheid elections]] of April 1994.<ref name=":0" />

== Constitutional Court: 1994–2004 ==
In August 1994, Ackermann became one of five judges whom post-apartheid President [[Nelson Mandela]] appointed to the inaugural bench of the newly established [[Constitutional Court of South Africa]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Hatchard |first=John |date=1995 |title=The Constitutional Court of South Africa Delivers its First Judgments |url=https://www.cambridge.org/core/journals/journal-of-african-law/article/abs/constitutional-court-of-south-africa-delivers-its-first-judgments/4C34360D73D0AEF3BAE437F080A48AB4 |journal=Journal of African Law |language=en |volume=39 |issue=2 |pages=232–233 |doi=10.1017/S0021855300006422 |issn=1464-3731}}</ref> The court's first term began in February 1995 and Ackermann sat in the court until his retirement in January 2004.<ref name=":0" /> Throughout his time on the bench, he chaired the Constitutional Court's library committee.<ref name=":0" /><ref name=":3">{{Cite news |date=3 December 2003 |title=Constitutional Court says goodbye to Ackerman |work=IOL |url=https://www.iol.co.za/news/south-africa/constitutional-court-says-goodbye-to-ackerman-117849 |access-date=16 December 2023}}</ref>

Ackermann played a central role in the development of the court's early jurisprudence on [[dignity]] and its relationship to [[Equality (law)|equality]] and [[non-discrimination]] doctrine.<ref>{{Cite book |last1=Barnard-Naudé |first1=A. J. |url=https://books.google.com/books?id=JcX0cfQq4EsC |title=Dignity, Freedom and the Post-apartheid Legal Order: The Critical Jurisprudence of Laurie Ackermann |last2=Cornell |first2=Drucilla |last3=Bois |first3=François Du |last4=Glazewski |first4=Jan |date=2009 |publisher=Juta |isbn=978-0-7021-8137-5 |language=en |author-link2=Drucilla Cornell}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Berkowitz |first=Roger |author-link=Roger Berkowitz (political theorist) |date=2008 |title=Revolutionary Constitutionalism: Some Thoughts on Laurie Ackermann's Jurisprudence |url=https://papers.ssrn.com/sol3/papers.cfm?abstract_id=1336247 |journal=Acta Juridica |volume=1|ssrn=1336247 }}</ref> He was also renowned for his expertise in [[Comparative constitutional law|comparative constitutionalism]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Roux |first=Theunis |date=2008 |title=The Dignity of Comparative Constitutional Law |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/actj2008&id=199&div=&collection= |journal=Acta Juridica |volume=2008 |pages=185}}</ref> He was described as a [[Judicial minimalism|judicial maximalist]],<ref name=":4">{{Cite journal |last=McConnachie |first=Chris |date=2014 |title=Human Dignity, 'Unfair Discrimination' and Guidance |url=https://www.jstor.org/stable/24562861 |journal=Oxford Journal of Legal Studies |volume=34 |issue=3 |pages=609–629 |doi=10.1093/ojls/gqu002 |jstor=24562861 |issn=0143-6503}}</ref><ref>{{Cite journal |last=O'Regan |first=Catherine |author-link=Kate O'Regan |date=2008 |title=From Form to Substance: The Constitutional Jurisprudence of Laurie Ackermann |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/actj2008&id=15&div=&collection= |journal=Acta Juridica |volume=2008 |pages=1}}</ref> and [[Drucilla Cornell]] argued that his jurisprudence was strongly [[Kantian ethics|Kantian]].<ref>{{Cite journal |last=Cornell |first=Drucilla |author-link=Drucilla Cornell |date=2008 |title=Bridging the Span toward Justice: Laurie Ackermann and the Ongoing Architectonic of Dignity Jurisprudence |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/actj2008&id=32&div=&collection= |journal=Acta Juridica |volume=2008 |pages=18}}</ref> Notable judgments written by Ackermann included ''[[National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality v Minister of Justice]]'' and ''[[National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality v Minister of Home Affairs]]'', historic judgments on [[Sexual orientation discrimination|sexual-orientation discrimination]] which set the precedent for the subsequent legalisation of same-sex marriage in ''[[Minister of Home Affairs v Fourie]].<ref name=":2" />''

In January 2004, upon turning 70, Ackermann retired from the bench.<ref name=":3" /> His final judgment, handed down in December 2003, was ''Shaik v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others'', in which he struck down businessman [[Schabir Shaik]]'s application to have provisions of the [[National Prosecuting Authority Act, 1998|National Prosecuting Authority Act]] – which had been used to question Shaik about [[South African Arms Deal|Arms Deal]] corruption – declared incompatible with the [[right to silence]].<ref>{{Cite web |last=Engelbrecht |first=Leon |date=2003-12-02 |title=Shaik's lawyer botches NPA court challenge |url=https://mg.co.za/article/2003-12-02-shaiks-lawyer-botches-npa-court-challenge/ |access-date=2023-12-16 |website=The Mail & Guardian |language=en-ZA}}</ref>

== Retirement and other activities ==
After his retirement, Ackermann founded the South African Institute for Advanced Constitutional, Public, Human Rights and International Law, a research institute at the [[University of Johannesburg]]. In 2012, he published ''Human Dignity: Lodestar for Equality in South Africa'', a monograph which expounds the theoretical and constitutional background to the relationship between dignity, equality, and non-discrimination.'''<ref name=":4" /><ref>{{Cite journal |last=Pretorius |first=J. L. |date=2014 |title=Human Dignity: Lodestar for Equality in South Africa |url=https://heinonline.org/HOL/Page?handle=hein.journals/stelblr25&id=637&div=&collection= |journal=Stellenbosch Law Review |volume=25 |pages=628}}</ref>'''

Ackermann was formerly the chairperson of the board of governors of Pretoria Boys High School and he was later the South African secretary of the [[Rhodes Trust]] from 1988 to 2003. Stellenbosch University awarded him an honorary LLD, and he is an honorary fellow of [[Worcester College, Oxford]].<ref name=":0" />

== Personal life ==
In 1958, he married Denise du Toit, who later became a [[Feminist theology|feminist theologian]] at the [[University of the Western Cape]]. They lived in [[Cape Town]] and had three children, two daughters and a son.<ref name=":5" /><ref name=":3" />

=== Death ===
Ackermann died in Cape Town on 25 May 2024, at the age of 90.<ref>{{Cite web |date=2024-05-27 |title=Freedom Under Law statement on the passing of Justice Laurie Ackermann (13 January 1934 – 25 May 2024) |url=https://www.freedomunderlaw.org/2024/05/27/freedom-under-law-statement-on-the-passing-of-justice-laurie-ackermann-13-january-1934-25-may-2024/ |access-date=2024-05-27 |website=Freedom Under Law |language=en-ZA}}</ref>

== References ==
{{Reflist}}

== External links ==
* [https://www.concourt.org.za/index.php/judges/former-judges/11-former-judges/59-justice-laurie-ackermann] at Constitutional Court of South Africa
{{Wikisource author|wislink=Lourens Ackermann|title=Lourens Ackermann}}

{{Constitutional Court of South Africa}}

{{Authority control}}

{{DEFAULTSORT:Ackermann, Laurie}}
[[Category:1934 births]]
[[Category:2024 deaths]]
[[Category:Judges of the Constitutional Court of South Africa]]
[[Category:People from Pretoria]]
[[Category:Afrikaner people]]
[[Category:Alumni of Worcester College, Oxford]]
[[Category:Alumni of Pretoria Boys High School]]
[[Category:Stellenbosch University alumni]]
[[Category:South African Rhodes Scholars]]
[[Category:South African judges on the courts of Lesotho]]
[[Category:21st-century South African judges]]
[[Category:20th-century South African judges]]
[[Category:20th-century South African lawyers]]
[[Category:South African Senior Counsel]]
[[Category:Academic staff of Stellenbosch University]]

Latest revision as of 14:32, 26 September 2024

Laurie Ackermann
Justice of the Constitutional Court
In office
August 1994 – January 2004
Appointed byNelson Mandela
Judge of the Supreme Court
In office
January 1993 – August 1994
DivisionCape Provincial
In office
October 1980 – September 1987
DivisionTransvaal Provincial
Personal details
Born
Lourens Wepener Hugo Ackermann

(1934-01-14)14 January 1934
Pretoria, Transvaal
Union of South Africa
Died25 May 2024(2024-05-25) (aged 90)
Cape Town, South Africa
Spouse
Denise Ackermann
(m. 1958)
EducationPretoria Boys High School
Alma materStellenbosch University
Worcester College, Oxford

Lourens Wepener Hugo "Laurie" Ackermann (14 January 1934 – 25 May 2024) was a South African judge who served on the Constitutional Court of South Africa from 1994 to 2004. Appointed to the inaugural court by Nelson Mandela, he is best known for his jurisprudence on dignity. He was formerly an academic, a practising advocate, and a judge of the Supreme Court of South Africa.

Born in Pretoria, Ackermann practised at the Pretoria Bar between 1958 and 1980, gaining silk status in 1975. He served as a judge in the Transvaal Provincial Division of the Supreme Court between 1980 and 1987, when he resigned due to his opposition to apartheid legislation. After five years as a professor in human rights law at Stellenbosch University, he returned to the Supreme Court in 1993, sitting in the Cape Provincial Division until he was elevated to the Constitutional Court in August 1994. He retired from the judiciary in January 2004.

Early life and education

[edit]

Ackermann was born on 14 January 1934 in Pretoria in the former Transvaal.[1] Both of his parents were Afrikaners, but he was raised bilingual.[2] He matriculated from Pretoria Boys High School in 1950 and attended Stellenbosch University, where he completed a Bachelor of Arts in law in 1953.[1] In 1954, he went to Oxford University as the Cape Rhodes Scholar, reading for a Bachelor of Arts in jurisprudence. Thereafter he returned to Stellenbosch University to complete his LLB in 1957.[1][3]

Apartheid-era career

[edit]

In the first half of 1958, Ackermann clerked for Justice Faure Williamson of the Supreme Court of South Africa.[1] Then, between 1958 and 1980, he practised as an advocate at the Pretoria Bar.[3] He gained silk status in 1975 and served stints on the Pretoria Bar Council and the General Council of the Bar. He first acted as a judge in August 1976, and in October 1980 he was permanently appointed to the bench of the Transvaal Provincial Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa.[1][3] During this period, he was also the national vice-president of the National Institute for the Prevention of Crime and the Rehabilitation of Offenders.[3]

In September 1987, he retired from the bench in order to take up an academic appointment at his alma mater, becoming the Harry Oppenheimer Chair in Human Rights Law at Stellenbosch University.[3] The chair was newly established with an endowment from the Oppenheimer Foundation, and his students included future legal scholar Pierre de Vos.[4] Ackermann later said that he left the bench when, partly due to the influence of human rights law expert Louis Henkin, he came to endorse a "total rejection of apartheid" and of the sovereignty of the apartheid-era Parliament.[2] According to Ackermann, he was forced to resign because State President P. W. Botha would not permit him to take early retirement.[2]

He held his position at Stellenbosch until the end of 1992, and during that time he was a visiting scholar at Columbia University and the Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law.[3] He also served on the highest courts of two neighbouring countries: he was a judge of the Lesotho Court of Appeal from 1988 to 1992 and an acting judge on the Namibian Supreme Court from 1991 to 1992.[2]

In January 1993, during the negotiations to end apartheid, Ackermann accepted reappointment to the South African Supreme Court, now in the Cape Provincial Division. He chaired the Cape Electoral Appeal Tribunal during the first post-apartheid elections of April 1994.[3]

Constitutional Court: 1994–2004

[edit]

In August 1994, Ackermann became one of five judges whom post-apartheid President Nelson Mandela appointed to the inaugural bench of the newly established Constitutional Court of South Africa.[5] The court's first term began in February 1995 and Ackermann sat in the court until his retirement in January 2004.[3] Throughout his time on the bench, he chaired the Constitutional Court's library committee.[3][6]

Ackermann played a central role in the development of the court's early jurisprudence on dignity and its relationship to equality and non-discrimination doctrine.[7][8] He was also renowned for his expertise in comparative constitutionalism.[9] He was described as a judicial maximalist,[10][11] and Drucilla Cornell argued that his jurisprudence was strongly Kantian.[12] Notable judgments written by Ackermann included National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality v Minister of Justice and National Coalition for Gay and Lesbian Equality v Minister of Home Affairs, historic judgments on sexual-orientation discrimination which set the precedent for the subsequent legalisation of same-sex marriage in Minister of Home Affairs v Fourie.[4]

In January 2004, upon turning 70, Ackermann retired from the bench.[6] His final judgment, handed down in December 2003, was Shaik v Minister of Justice and Constitutional Development and Others, in which he struck down businessman Schabir Shaik's application to have provisions of the National Prosecuting Authority Act – which had been used to question Shaik about Arms Deal corruption – declared incompatible with the right to silence.[13]

Retirement and other activities

[edit]

After his retirement, Ackermann founded the South African Institute for Advanced Constitutional, Public, Human Rights and International Law, a research institute at the University of Johannesburg. In 2012, he published Human Dignity: Lodestar for Equality in South Africa, a monograph which expounds the theoretical and constitutional background to the relationship between dignity, equality, and non-discrimination.[10][14]

Ackermann was formerly the chairperson of the board of governors of Pretoria Boys High School and he was later the South African secretary of the Rhodes Trust from 1988 to 2003. Stellenbosch University awarded him an honorary LLD, and he is an honorary fellow of Worcester College, Oxford.[3]

Personal life

[edit]

In 1958, he married Denise du Toit, who later became a feminist theologian at the University of the Western Cape. They lived in Cape Town and had three children, two daughters and a son.[1][6]

Death

[edit]

Ackermann died in Cape Town on 25 May 2024, at the age of 90.[15]

References

[edit]
  1. ^ a b c d e f "Professional news: Mr Justice L W H Ackermann". De Rebus: 161. April 1981.
  2. ^ a b c d Klaaren, Jonathan (2012). "The Constitutionalist Concept of Justice L. Ackermann: Evolution by Revolution". Making the Road by Walking: The Evolution of the South African Constitution. Pretoria University Law Press. pp. 27–43. ISBN 978-1920538750. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  3. ^ a b c d e f g h i j "Justice Laurie Ackermann". Constitutional Court of South Africa. Archived from the original on 7 January 2006. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  4. ^ a b De Vos, Pierre (2008). "From Heteronormativity to Full Sexual Citizenship: Equality and Sexual Freedom in Laurie Ackermann's Constitutional Jurisprudence". Acta Juridica. 2008: 254.
  5. ^ Hatchard, John (1995). "The Constitutional Court of South Africa Delivers its First Judgments". Journal of African Law. 39 (2): 232–233. doi:10.1017/S0021855300006422. ISSN 1464-3731.
  6. ^ a b c "Constitutional Court says goodbye to Ackerman". IOL. 3 December 2003. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  7. ^ Barnard-Naudé, A. J.; Cornell, Drucilla; Bois, François Du; Glazewski, Jan (2009). Dignity, Freedom and the Post-apartheid Legal Order: The Critical Jurisprudence of Laurie Ackermann. Juta. ISBN 978-0-7021-8137-5.
  8. ^ Berkowitz, Roger (2008). "Revolutionary Constitutionalism: Some Thoughts on Laurie Ackermann's Jurisprudence". Acta Juridica. 1. SSRN 1336247.
  9. ^ Roux, Theunis (2008). "The Dignity of Comparative Constitutional Law". Acta Juridica. 2008: 185.
  10. ^ a b McConnachie, Chris (2014). "Human Dignity, 'Unfair Discrimination' and Guidance". Oxford Journal of Legal Studies. 34 (3): 609–629. doi:10.1093/ojls/gqu002. ISSN 0143-6503. JSTOR 24562861.
  11. ^ O'Regan, Catherine (2008). "From Form to Substance: The Constitutional Jurisprudence of Laurie Ackermann". Acta Juridica. 2008: 1.
  12. ^ Cornell, Drucilla (2008). "Bridging the Span toward Justice: Laurie Ackermann and the Ongoing Architectonic of Dignity Jurisprudence". Acta Juridica. 2008: 18.
  13. ^ Engelbrecht, Leon (2 December 2003). "Shaik's lawyer botches NPA court challenge". The Mail & Guardian. Retrieved 16 December 2023.
  14. ^ Pretorius, J. L. (2014). "Human Dignity: Lodestar for Equality in South Africa". Stellenbosch Law Review. 25: 628.
  15. ^ "Freedom Under Law statement on the passing of Justice Laurie Ackermann (13 January 1934 – 25 May 2024)". Freedom Under Law. 27 May 2024. Retrieved 27 May 2024.
[edit]
  • [1] at Constitutional Court of South Africa