University of Cape Town Faculty of Law | |
---|---|
Parent school | University of Cape Town |
Established | 1859 |
Dean | Danwood Chirwa (since 2019) |
Location | Cape Town, South Africa |
Website | law |
The University of Cape Town Faculty of Law is the oldest law school in South Africa. It was established in 1859 as a division of the South African College in the former Cape Colony. It currently enrols about 1,200 students in undergraduate and postgraduate programmes, the largest being the LLB. It is housed in the Wilfred and Jules Kramer Law Building on the university's Middle Campus in Rondebosch, Cape Town.
The faculty comprises three academic departments – one each for public law, commercial law, and private law – and a number of research units. It also houses the postgraduate School for Advanced Legal Studies and the journal Acta Juridica . The faculty's staff and students were predominantly white under the apartheid-era Extension of University Education Act, but the faculty has participated in UCT's affirmative action measures since the end of apartheid.
The faculty's alumni include a former Chief Justice of South Africa (Newton Ogilvie Thompson), four justices of the Constitutional Court of South Africa (John Didcott, Albie Sachs, Kate O'Regan, and Owen Rogers), and a justice of the Supreme Court of Zimbabwe (Bennie Goldin). Alumni have been particularly well-represented in the Cape Division of the High Court of South Africa and former Supreme Court of South Africa; several former Judges President of the division – including Theo van Wyk, George Munnik, Gerald Friedman, and Edwin King – studied law in the faculty. Alumni have also served as Judge President of the Land Claims Court (Fikile Bam), the Competition Appeal Court (Dennis Davis), and the Free State High Court (Cagney Musi). Other alumni are prominent figures in politics, academia, and legal practice.
In 1858 the Cape Colony instituted the legal board exam, inaugurating a new regulatory regime for South African legal practitioners. The following year, at the request of the colonial government, the South African College (SAC) in Cape Town became the first South African institution to introduce formal law teaching through the establishment of a professorial chair in law. [1] [2] During its first 60 years, the law program did not issue its own legal qualifications, but instead served to prepare students for the external examinations set by the Board of Public Examiners and later (from 1863) by the University of the Cape of Good Hope. [3]
During a meeting on 23 February 1859, the SAC Council elected unanimously to appoint Jan Brand as the first professor of law. [3] The first law lecture was delivered on 16 April 1859. [4] Brand's tenure ended in 1863, when he became the president of the Orange Free State; his two successors, Professors F. S. Watermeyer and A. W. Cole, served very brief stints before their death and resignation, respectively. [3] Thereafter, between 1865 and 1890, the law chair at SAC was vacant due to cost-saving measures by the colonial government. During that hiatus, the law program's foremost advocate was Casper Hendrik van Zyl, who provided informal law teaching to SAC students and continued to lobby for the formal establishment of a School of Law. In 1890 his campaign succeeded and he was appointed to the revived SAC chair in law. [3]
Van Zyl retired in 1896 and was followed in his chair by Professor Alexander John McGregor in 1896; Professors L. E. Benjamin and William Porter Buchanan (jointly) in 1898; and (again jointly) Professors Clemens Gutsche and R. R. R. B. Howes in 1912. [3] In the early 20th century, the law school became increasingly institutionalised, and the Law Students' Council was established in 1916. [3] However, throughout this period, there remained only a single chair in law, held by one or two men at a time; other teaching was provided by adjunct lecturers, who included Fritz Gardiner, Reginald Davis, George Sutton, Jackie de Villiers, Fraser Russell, and Albert van der Sandt Centlivres (all future judges). [3] From 1896 onwards, lectures were delivered on the SAC campus; before then, they had been held in various locations, notably the Master's Meeting Room at the Cape Supreme Court on Adderley Street, until classes moved onto the SAC campus in 1896. [5] The curriculum combined English law with Roman and Roman-Dutch law. [6] [7]
In April 1918, SAC was re-launched as the University of Cape Town (UCT); it conferred its first LLB degree in December 1919 to Frans Herman van der Willigen. [3] Student numbers continued to grow over the next two decades, reaching 74 students by 1939. [5] The university pursued an open model of admissions, based primarily on academic criteria, abstaining from the colour bar approach favoured by Afrikaans-medium universities; [8] early black students at the law faculty included Fikile Bam, Dullah Omar, and Cissie Gool. [3] Nonetheless, the faculty's black student population was extremely small, and it was further restricted with the formal inauguration of apartheid in 1948 and especially the Extension of University Education Act in 1959. [8]
The academic staff grew alongside the student population. In 1919, after a sustained campaign, the law program obtained approval to establish a new full-time chair in Roman-Dutch law. Its first holders were G. W. Wille, Tom William Price, and Wouter de Vos, in that order. [3] In 1923 and 1925, two further chairs were established, one of which was the W. P. Schreiner Chair of Roman Law and Jurisprudence, a post in Roman law endowed in honour of Prime Minister W. P. Schreiner. [5] The Schreiner Chair was held by Professor J. Kerr Wylie until 1948, by Professor Ben-Zion Beinart until 1974, by Professor Johannes Christiaan de Wet until 1981, and finally by Professor Reinhard Zimmermann until 1988. [3] In later years it was joined by chairs in South African private law (1962), public law (1967), and commercial law (1973), established under Professors Wouter de Vos, Donald Molteno, and J. T. R. Gibson respectively. [3] The first women to be appointed permanently to the faculty were Ina Ackermann and Nicola Peart. [3]
Having occupied premises in the Egyptian Building on Hiddingh Campus and later in the P. D. Hahn Building on Upper Campus, [4] the law faculty moved to its own building at the end of 1987. [3] The Wilfred and Jules Kramer Law Building, named after two major benefactors of the faculty, is located on UCT's Middle Campus in Rondebosch, Cape Town. Since 2000, the bottom two floors of the Kramer Building house the Brand van Zyl Law Library, which became a separate branch of the UCT Libraries in 1962. [9] The library is named after Gideon Brand van Zyl, a former Governor-General of South Africa; van Zyl was the son of 19th-century law professor Casper Hendrik van Zyl, and he donated his family's extensive collection of literature on Roman-Dutch law in 1949. [9] [10]
After the end of apartheid in 1994, all UCT faculties provided equal access to all race groups and implemented strong affirmative action programmes. Nonetheless, like other UCT faculties, the Faculty of Law was affected by the #RhodesMustFall and #FeesMustFall protests between 2015 and 2017. [11] [12] Groups of law students complained that the faculty was "white-dominated", with a lower proportion of black students than the overall university; that it was afflicted by institutional racism; and that its syllabus neglected African customary law. [13] [14] They also complained that the academic staff comprised "predominantly white lecturers", [13] though at the time it had the second-highest proportion (29 per cent) of black South African academics of any UCT division. [15] Penelope Andrews, who was appointed as dean of the faculty at the beginning of 2016, argued publicly that there was "generally universal support for transformation" in the faculty, but that practical institutional change was hampered, inter alia, by generational divides in the faculty and the "veneration of an academic tradition mostly steeped in the British and northern European model." [16] After Andrews resigned in 2018, an internal panel investigated internal divisions in the faculty; its report concurred with disgruntled students that, "The demographic of the faculty is profoundly white and the culture tends to be male dominated." [17]
During the same period, in November 2017, the law faculty was briefly in danger of losing its accreditation, as the national Council of Higher Education announced that it had given the faculty six months to respond to various concerns that emerged during a review of the LLB programme. These concerns pertained to the institution's academic support for black law students and the success rate of black students in general. [18] [19]
As of 2024, the Faculty of Law was UCT's smallest faculty, enrolling about 1,200 undergraduate and postgraduate students annually.
The Faculty of Law offers the LLB as both an undergraduate and a postgraduate degree. Other postgraduate certifications – diplomas, LLMs, MPhils, and PhDs – are offered through the faculty's School for Advanced Legal Studies. Separately, the faculty's Law@work unit provides short courses, seminars, and workshops to the general public.
Across three academic departments, the faculty hosts 13 different specialised research units. [20] The Department of Public Law houses the Centre of Criminology, the Centre for Law & Society, the Institute of Marine & Environmental Law, the Democratic Governance & Rights Unit (which encompasses AfricanLII, JIFA, Judges Matter, and Magistrates Matter), the Land & Accountability Research Centre, and the Refugee Rights Unit. The Department of Commercial Law houses the Centre for Comparative Law in Africa, the Corporate Law and Governance Unit, the iNtaka Centre for Law & Technology (which encompasses the LawTechLab), the Intellectual Property Law and Policy Research Unit, the Labour Development & Governance Research Unit, the Shipping Law Unit, and the UCT Tax Unit for Fiscal Research. Finally, the Department of Private Law houses the Centre for Rhetoric Studies and the Mineral Law in Africa unit. [21]
The oldest research unit is the Centre of Criminology, which was established in 1977 as the Institute of Crimonology; it was led first by Jannie van Rooyen and then by Rob Nairn. [3] In its current iteration, it is attached to the Faculty of Humanities, as well as the Faculty of Law, and runs the Legal Education Action Project. [3]
LLB students are required to complete pro bono community service as a compulsory component of the degree. [22] The two specialised on-campus law clinics are the UCT Law Clinic and the Refugee Rights Clinic. [23] Other student organisations include the Law Students' Council (the faculty's student representative council); the Chamber of Legal Students; and chapters of Law and Social Justice, the Black Lawyers' Association, and SHAWCO. There is also a student moot society, which is based at the university's Oliver Tambo Moot Court (established in 2001 in Oliver Tambo's honour). [24]
The faculty's law journal is Acta Juridica , founded in 1956 by Professor Ben-Zion Beinart and published annually by Juta and Company since 2001. [3] [25] Another publication, a quarterly student magazine called Altum Sonatur, was founded in 2010. [26]
Subject-specific university ranking services generally rank UCT's law faculty as the best or among the best on the African continent. In 2023 it was ranked 151–175 worldwide by Times Higher Education, [27] 151–200 by QS, [28] and 201–300 in the Shanghai Ranking. [29] In some prior rankings it was included in the top 100 worldwide. [30]
The Faculty of Law is a member of the Law Schools Global League. [31] In line with its internationalisation policy, it has academic collaboration agreements with counterpart law faculties at various universities: the University of Nigeria, University of Dar Es Salaam, University of Hargeisa, University of Jos, University of Bissau, National University of Rwanda, Renmin University of China, Kyushu University, National Law School of India, Paraiba State University, International University College of Turin, University of Lisbon, Swiss Institute of Comparative Law, and, most recently, [32] University of Notre Dame. [33]
The Faculty of Law is one of the professional graduate schools of McGill University in Montreal, Quebec, Canada. It is the oldest law school in Canada. 180 candidates are admitted for any given academic year. For the year 2021 class, the acceptance rate was 10%.
The University of Cape Town (UCT) is a public research university in Cape Town, South Africa. Established in 1829 as the South African College, it was granted full university status in 1918, making it the oldest university in South Africa and the oldest university in Sub-Saharan Africa in continuous operation.
Stellenbosch University (SU) is a public research university situated in Stellenbosch, a town in the Western Cape province of South Africa. Stellenbosch is the oldest university in South Africa and the oldest extant university in Sub-Saharan Africa, which received full university status in 1918. Stellenbosch University designed and manufactured Africa's first microsatellite, SUNSAT, launched in 1999.
Rhodes University is a public research university located in Makhanda in the Eastern Cape Province of South Africa. It is one of four universities in the province.
The West Bengal National University of Juridical Sciences is a National Law University (NLU) located in Bidhannagar, Kolkata, West Bengal, India. In 2023, it was ranked 4th among law colleges in India by National Institutional Ranking Framework and 2nd by India Today. It comes under the exclusive chancellorship and purview of the Chief Justice of India.
The Boston University School of Law is the law school of Boston University, a private research university in Boston. Established in 1872, it is the third-oldest law school in New England, after Harvard Law School and Yale Law School. Approximately 630 students are enrolled in the full-time J.D. degree program and about 350 in the school's five LLM degree programs. BU Law was one of the first law schools in the country to admit students to study law regardless of race or gender.
Jennifer Yvonne Mokgoro GOB was a South African jurist who served on the Constitutional Court of South Africa from October 1994 to October 2009. She also chaired the South African Law Reform Commission between 1995 and 2011. She qualified as a lawyer in the former Bophuthatswana and was a legal academic before she was appointed to the bench by President Nelson Mandela.
The School of Law at the University of Glasgow provides undergraduate and postgraduate courses in Law, and awards the degrees of Bachelor of Laws, Master of Laws, LLM by Research, Master of Research (MRes) and Doctor of Philosophy, the degree of Doctor of Laws being awarded generally only as an honorary degree.
Pierre Francois de Vos is a South African constitutional law scholar. He holds the Claude Leon Foundation Chair in Constitutional Governance at the University of Cape Town. Before taking up that position in July 2009, he taught at the University of the Western Cape. He is popularly known for his blog, Constitutionally Speaking, which he has written since November 2006. In October of 2024, he was accused of disseminating child pornography. De Vos's twitter account contained a video of a "Chinese virgin young boy" being sexually abused.
Jacques André Rousseau is a South African academic, secular activist and social commentator.
The Centre for Human Rights at the University of Pretoria Faculty of Law, South Africa, is an organisation dedicated to promoting human rights on the continent of Africa. The centre, founded in 1986, promotes human rights through educational outreach, including multinational conferences, seminars and publications such as Human Rights Law in Africa, The African Human Rights Law Journal, the African Human Rights Law Reports and The Constitutional Law of South Africa. The centre, which was founded during Apartheid, assisted in adapting a Bill of Rights for South Africa and contributed to creating the South African Constitution. In 2006, the centre received the UNESCO Prize for Human Rights Education, particular recognising for the LLM in Human Rights and Democratisation in Africa and the African Human Rights Moot Court Competition.
The University of OxfordFaculty of Law is the law school of the University of Oxford. It has a history of over 800 years in the teaching and learning of law.
Oliver Deneys Schreiner MC KC, was a judge of the Appellate Division of the Supreme Court of South Africa. One of the most renowned South African judges, he was passed over twice for the position of Chief Justice of South Africa for political reasons. He was later described as "the greatest Chief Justice South Africa never had".
University of Cape Town Libraries is the library system of the University of Cape Town in Cape Town, South Africa.
The SOAS School of Law is a law school of the University of London. It is based in the Paul Webley wing of the Senate House in Bloomsbury, London, United Kingdom. The SOAS School of Law has an emphasis on the legal systems of Asia, Africa and the Middle East.
Caroline Bongiwe Ncube is a Zimbabwean academic who is a professor of commercial law at the University of Cape Town. She holds the South African Research Chair in Intellectual Property, Innovation, and Development. Her primary research interest is intellectual property law and its socioeconomic implications.
Raylene May Keightley is a South African judge of the Supreme Court of Appeal. She was appointed to the bench in the Gauteng High Court in January 2016 after a career as a legal academic and practising lawyer. She was admitted as an attorney in 1986 and as an advocate in 2006.
Hugh Corder is an emeritus professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Cape Town. He served as UCT's youngest and longest-serving Chair of Public Law from 1987 to 2020.