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South African Chapter 9 Institutions: Are Their Decisions Binding After All?

Authors

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.25159/2520-9515/12333

Keywords:

appropriate remedial action, recommendations, provisionally or permanently binding decisions, documentary research methods, judicial theory

Abstract

Chapter 9 of the South African Constitution of 1996 makes provision for six institutions, amongst them, the Office of the Public Protector, such that each would, in some prescribed ways, support the constitutional democracy ushered in, with effect from 1994 in South Africa. This article addresses the issue of whether recent case law developments for the institutions to date assist in determining the binding effect of their decisions. The need to investigate how exactly the institutions’ decisions are to be construed by affected parties and what the implications of the pertinent judgments examined in this paper are, to the rest of the Chapter 9 institutions’ decisions, overwhelmingly beckons. The documentary research method was assumed to be the most appropriate research vehicle for this kind of study. The paper analyses a sample of relevant judgments of South African courts and enabling national legislation for each of the six Chapter 9 institutions. The analysis concludes that a Chapter 9 institution’s decision is provisionally binding to the affected party(ies), until otherwise determined: through interactions between the investigating Chapter 9 institution and the affected party(ies), or by the institution alone, where appropriate, or else through a law court review. Crucially, a “recommendation” is reasonably construed as also “appropriate remedial action.”

Author Biography

Mawonga Deliwe, University of Fort Hare

Mawonga Deliwe is a part-time reseacher with the University of Fort Hare’s Department of Public Administration.
He is also a member in good standing, of the Institute of Risk Management South Africa (IRMSA).

References

Botha, C.2012. Statutory Interpretation: An Introduction for Students. Cape Town: Juta and Co. Ltd.

Boyer, E. L. 1990. Scholarship Reconsidered: Priorities of the Professoriate. New Jersey: Princeton University Press.

Chirwa, D. M and Nijzink, L. (eds). 2012. Accountable Government in Africa: Perspectives from Law and Political Studies. Cape Town: United Nations University Press.

Corder, H. 2012. “Judicial Review of Parliamentary Actions in South Africa: A Nuanced Interpretation of the Separation of Powers.” In Accountable Government in Africa: Perspectives from Law and Political Studies, edited by D. Chirwa and Nijzink, 85–104. Cape Town: United Nations University Press.

Dyevre, A. 2008. “Making Sense of Judicial Lawmaking: A Theory of Theories of Adjudication.” EUI Working Paper 2008/9: Max Weber Programme. Badia Fiesolana, Italy: European University Institute Press.

De Vos, P. 2012. “Balancing Independence and Accountability: The Role of Chapter 9 Institutions in South Africa’s Constitutional Democracy.” In Accountable Government in Africa; Perspectives from Law and Political Studies, edited by D. Chirwa and Nijzink, 160 –177. Cape Town: United Nations University Press.

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Konstant, A. 2016. “Assessing the Performance of South Africa’s Constitution: Chapter 6 - the Performance of Chapter 9 Institutions.” South Africa: International Institute for Democracy and Electoral Assistance (IDEA) Publication.

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Legislation

Audit Profession Act No. 26 of 2006.

Commission for Gender Equality Act No. 39 of 1996 (CGE Act).

Commission for the Protection of the Rights of Cultural, Religious, and Linguistic Communities Act No. 19 of 2002 (CRLC Act).

Electoral Commission Act No. 51 of 1996, 2004.

Public Protector Act No. 23 of 1994.

Public Audit Act No. 25 of 2004.

Public Audit Act 25 of 2004, Material Irregularity Regulations.

South African Human Rights Commission Act No. 40 of 2013.

The Constitution of the Republic of South Africa of 1996.

Case Law

Democratic Alliance v South African Broadcasting Corporation 12497/2014 (DA v SABC).

Democratic Alliance v South African Broadcasting Corporation 393/2015 (2015).

Economic Freedom Fighters v President J G Zuma and Others CCT 143/15 and CCT 17/15 (informally referred to as the Nkandla case).

Independent Electoral Commission v Langeberg Municipality CCT 49 of 2001.

New National Party v Government of the Republic of South Africa (RSA) CCT 9/99.

Oudekraal Estate v City of Cape Town 41/2003.

The South African Human Rights Commission v AGRO DATA 39/2023) [2024] ZASCA 121.

Published

2025-06-17

Versions

How to Cite

Deliwe, Mawonga. 2025. “South African Chapter 9 Institutions: Are Their Decisions Binding After All?”. Journal of Law, Society and Development, June, 20 pages. https://doi.org/10.25159/2520-9515/12333.

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Section

Articles