Legal argumentation based on foreign law<br> An example from case law of the South African Constitutional Court
Author(s) -
Andrea Lollini
Publication year - 2007
Publication title -
utrecht law review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1871-515X
DOI - 10.18352/ulr.37
Subject(s) - law , public law , comparative law , political science , philosophy of law , private law , legal profession , legal research , municipal law , precedent , civil law (civil law) , constitutional law , constitutional court , sociology , constitution
This article aims to make some introductory remarks concerning the phenomenon of the circulation of ‘foreign law’ between constitutional courts. A convenient setting for some considerations regarding this legal phenomenon is the South African constitutional jurisprudence, since Section 39 of the 1996 Constitution enables the Constitutional Court to ‘consider foreign law’ when interpreting the Bill of Rights. This provision has led to the wide use of foreign jurisprudence and legislation, as well as extra-systemic parameters, that have formed the basis for models of legal argumentation. The article explores what appears to be a recurring ‘patterns’ of legal argumentation based on foreign law used by the Court which has been defined ‘probative importation’.
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