Constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitution

The purpose of this thesis is to broadly determine the influence of the Constitution on the South African labour environment and to do so from the perspective of the labour rights of workers who fall outside the ambit of the traditional common law contract of employment. An examination of the Consti...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Beck, Gregory Wayne
Other Authors: Faculty of Law
Language:en
Published: University of the Western Cape 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/11394/2841
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-uwc-oai-etd.uwc.ac.za-11394-28412014-09-08T04:01:27ZConstitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitutionBeck, Gregory WayneConstitutionCommon lawContract of employmentEmployeeSex workersIllegal workDismissalPurposive approachLegal cultureTransformationThe purpose of this thesis is to broadly determine the influence of the Constitution on the South African labour environment and to do so from the perspective of the labour rights of workers who fall outside the ambit of the traditional common law contract of employment. An examination of the Constitution’s influence will involve a consideration of various aspects including: (i) The evolution of the concept of employee and the contract of employment; (ii) The impact of the Constitution on South African labour relations and labour laws; (iii) The purposive interpretation of legislation; (iv) An outline of the 'Kylie' CCMA ruling and Labour Court judgment; (v) The current legal position of prostitution in South Africa; (vi) The requirements for a meaningful transformation in the legal treatment of sex workers particularly as regards their entitlement to the protections afforded to vulnerable workers provided in the LRA.Magister Philosophiae - MPhilUniversity of the Western CapeFaculty of Law2014-02-10T13:58:18Z2011/05/05 12:232011/05/052014-02-10T13:58:18Z2010Thesishttp://hdl.handle.net/11394/2841enUniversity of the Western Cape
collection NDLTD
language en
sources NDLTD
topic Constitution
Common law
Contract of employment
Employee
Sex workers
Illegal work
Dismissal
Purposive approach
Legal culture
Transformation
spellingShingle Constitution
Common law
Contract of employment
Employee
Sex workers
Illegal work
Dismissal
Purposive approach
Legal culture
Transformation
Beck, Gregory Wayne
Constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitution
description The purpose of this thesis is to broadly determine the influence of the Constitution on the South African labour environment and to do so from the perspective of the labour rights of workers who fall outside the ambit of the traditional common law contract of employment. An examination of the Constitution’s influence will involve a consideration of various aspects including: (i) The evolution of the concept of employee and the contract of employment; (ii) The impact of the Constitution on South African labour relations and labour laws; (iii) The purposive interpretation of legislation; (iv) An outline of the 'Kylie' CCMA ruling and Labour Court judgment; (v) The current legal position of prostitution in South Africa; (vi) The requirements for a meaningful transformation in the legal treatment of sex workers particularly as regards their entitlement to the protections afforded to vulnerable workers provided in the LRA. === Magister Philosophiae - MPhil
author2 Faculty of Law
author_facet Faculty of Law
Beck, Gregory Wayne
author Beck, Gregory Wayne
author_sort Beck, Gregory Wayne
title Constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitution
title_short Constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitution
title_full Constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitution
title_fullStr Constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitution
title_full_unstemmed Constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitution
title_sort constitutionalising the common law : considering the constitutional dispensation which affords all workers protection via section 23 of the constitution
publisher University of the Western Cape
publishDate 2014
url http://hdl.handle.net/11394/2841
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