The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law
`Organ of state' as a constitutional concept was first introduced by the 1993 Constitution, in which it was defined as including any statutory body or functionary. In their interpretation of this notion, the courts and academic writers invoked the tests developed at common law in order to deter...
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Online Access: | Mdumbe, Moses Fanyana (2009) The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1171> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1171 |
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ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-unisa-oai-uir.unisa.ac.za-10500-11712018-11-19T17:14:01Z The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law Mdumbe, Moses Fanyana Van Wyk, Dawid Hercules Public Constitutional function Constitutional power Administration Department of State Control test Public interest Definition clause Functionary Statutory body Governmental institution State Public body The state Public function Public power Organ of state 342.068 Constitutional law -- South Africa Implied powers (Constitutional law) -- South Africa `Organ of state' as a constitutional concept was first introduced by the 1993 Constitution, in which it was defined as including any statutory body or functionary. In their interpretation of this notion, the courts and academic writers invoked the tests developed at common law in order to determine its meaning. The commentators, on the one hand, used a variety of tests. The courts, on the other hand, subscribed to what has come to be known as the `control test'. The 1996 Constitution followed with a comprehensive definition of `organ of state'. This notion is also employed in other laws by direct reference or incorporation of the definition in section 239 with slight adjustments. Regrettably, the limited approach developed by the court in their interpretation of the notion of `organ of state' for the purposes of the 1993 Constitution has spilled over to the interpretation of the concept under the 1996 Constitution. The question is whether this is justifiable. The constitutional definition of `organ of state' makes it clear that other institutions and functionaries are organs of state on the basis of what they are and others by virtue of the functions they are engaged in. Therefore strict adherence to the control test or any other test could unjustifiably limit the application of the Constitution. Jurisprudence LL.M. 2009-08-25T10:50:16Z 2009-08-25T10:50:16Z 2009-08-25T10:50:16Z 2003-06-30 Dissertation Mdumbe, Moses Fanyana (2009) The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1171> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1171 en 1 online resource (xi, 120 leaves) |
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Public Constitutional function Constitutional power Administration Department of State Control test Public interest Definition clause Functionary Statutory body Governmental institution State Public body The state Public function Public power Organ of state 342.068 Constitutional law -- South Africa Implied powers (Constitutional law) -- South Africa |
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Public Constitutional function Constitutional power Administration Department of State Control test Public interest Definition clause Functionary Statutory body Governmental institution State Public body The state Public function Public power Organ of state 342.068 Constitutional law -- South Africa Implied powers (Constitutional law) -- South Africa Mdumbe, Moses Fanyana The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law |
description |
`Organ of state' as a constitutional concept was first introduced by the 1993 Constitution, in which it was defined as including any statutory body or functionary. In their interpretation of this notion, the courts and academic writers invoked the tests developed at common law in order to determine its meaning. The commentators, on the one hand, used a variety of tests. The courts, on the other hand, subscribed to what has come to be known as the `control test'. The 1996 Constitution followed with a comprehensive definition of `organ of state'. This notion is also employed in other laws by direct reference or incorporation of the definition in section 239 with slight adjustments. Regrettably, the limited approach developed by the court in their interpretation of the notion of `organ of state' for the purposes of the 1993 Constitution has spilled over to the interpretation of the concept under the 1996 Constitution. The question is whether this is justifiable. The constitutional definition of `organ of state' makes it clear that other institutions and functionaries are organs of state on the basis of what they are and others by virtue of the functions they are engaged in. Therefore strict adherence to the control test or any other test could unjustifiably limit the application of the Constitution. === Jurisprudence === LL.M. |
author2 |
Van Wyk, Dawid Hercules |
author_facet |
Van Wyk, Dawid Hercules Mdumbe, Moses Fanyana |
author |
Mdumbe, Moses Fanyana |
author_sort |
Mdumbe, Moses Fanyana |
title |
The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law |
title_short |
The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law |
title_full |
The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law |
title_fullStr |
The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law |
title_full_unstemmed |
The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law |
title_sort |
meaning of 'organ of state` in south african law |
publishDate |
2009 |
url |
Mdumbe, Moses Fanyana (2009) The meaning of 'Organ of State` in South African law, University of South Africa, Pretoria, <http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1171> http://hdl.handle.net/10500/1171 |
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AT mdumbemosesfanyana themeaningoforganofstateinsouthafricanlaw AT mdumbemosesfanyana meaningoforganofstateinsouthafricanlaw |
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