Judicial Review of the Legislative Process in Lesotho: Lessons from South Africa

The Constitution of Lesotho has a supremacy clause which ordinarily empowers the judiciary to review the actions of other branches of government. However, the judiciary in Lesotho seems to treat the legislative process with deference. This deference seems to be based on the old common law notion of...

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Main Author: Hoolo 'Nyane
Format: Article
Language:Afrikaans
Published: North-West University 2019-10-01
Series:Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal
Subjects:
Online Access:https://journals.assaf.org.za/index.php/per/article/view/5713
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spelling doaj-ff55a349cf5c42eeab9e4b437c4555ee2020-11-25T02:49:19ZafrNorth-West UniversityPotchefstroom Electronic Law Journal1727-37812019-10-012210.17159/1727-3781/2019/v22i0a5713Judicial Review of the Legislative Process in Lesotho: Lessons from South AfricaHoolo 'Nyane0FACULTY OF LAW, NATIONAL UNIVERSITY OF LESOTHO The Constitution of Lesotho has a supremacy clause which ordinarily empowers the judiciary to review the actions of other branches of government. However, the judiciary in Lesotho seems to treat the legislative process with deference. This deference seems to be based on the old common law notion of the non-intervention of the judiciary in the legislative process. The notion has its roots in the British constitutional system. The Constitution of Lesotho, 1993 has even protected this doctrine through a constitutional ouster clause in section 80(5). The main question which this paper seeks to answer is whether indeed the common law notion of non-intervention in the legislative process is part of the constitutional law of Lesotho. In the end, the paper uses South African jurisprudence on the review of the legislative process to make a case that Lesotho can use the supremacy clause in the constitution and other constitutional doctrines such as the rule of law and legality to break with the common law notion of non-interventionism. https://journals.assaf.org.za/index.php/per/article/view/5713Lesothojudicial reviewlegislative processConstitution of LesothoSouth Africa
collection DOAJ
language Afrikaans
format Article
sources DOAJ
author Hoolo 'Nyane
spellingShingle Hoolo 'Nyane
Judicial Review of the Legislative Process in Lesotho: Lessons from South Africa
Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal
Lesotho
judicial review
legislative process
Constitution of Lesotho
South Africa
author_facet Hoolo 'Nyane
author_sort Hoolo 'Nyane
title Judicial Review of the Legislative Process in Lesotho: Lessons from South Africa
title_short Judicial Review of the Legislative Process in Lesotho: Lessons from South Africa
title_full Judicial Review of the Legislative Process in Lesotho: Lessons from South Africa
title_fullStr Judicial Review of the Legislative Process in Lesotho: Lessons from South Africa
title_full_unstemmed Judicial Review of the Legislative Process in Lesotho: Lessons from South Africa
title_sort judicial review of the legislative process in lesotho: lessons from south africa
publisher North-West University
series Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal
issn 1727-3781
publishDate 2019-10-01
description The Constitution of Lesotho has a supremacy clause which ordinarily empowers the judiciary to review the actions of other branches of government. However, the judiciary in Lesotho seems to treat the legislative process with deference. This deference seems to be based on the old common law notion of the non-intervention of the judiciary in the legislative process. The notion has its roots in the British constitutional system. The Constitution of Lesotho, 1993 has even protected this doctrine through a constitutional ouster clause in section 80(5). The main question which this paper seeks to answer is whether indeed the common law notion of non-intervention in the legislative process is part of the constitutional law of Lesotho. In the end, the paper uses South African jurisprudence on the review of the legislative process to make a case that Lesotho can use the supremacy clause in the constitution and other constitutional doctrines such as the rule of law and legality to break with the common law notion of non-interventionism.
topic Lesotho
judicial review
legislative process
Constitution of Lesotho
South Africa
url https://journals.assaf.org.za/index.php/per/article/view/5713
work_keys_str_mv AT hoolonyane judicialreviewofthelegislativeprocessinlesotholessonsfromsouthafrica
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