
POST-APARTHEID REFLECTIONS ON CRITIQUE, TRANSFORMATION AND REFUSAL
Author(s) -
Joel Sm Modiri
Publication year - 2011
Publication title -
pretoria student law review
Language(s) - English
Resource type - Journals
ISSN - 1998-0280
DOI - 10.29053/pslr.v5i.2145
Subject(s) - oppression , jurisprudence , formality , prejudice (legal term) , sociology , politics , law , emancipation , relevance (law) , political science
In this article I engage with the notion of refusal, as introduced by Karin Van Marle, to post-apartheid jurisprudence as a way through which to think of life, death, law and politics against the backdrop of poverty, social misery, disease, oppression and prejudice. She proposes that we consider refusal firstly as a possible mode of critical thinking and theorising but ultimately also as an alternative approach to law and jurisprudence. For Van Marle, what lies at the heart of refusal is the ‘idea of unexpectedness that breaks with the formality and predictability of law’ — an unexpectedness that could disclose new directions for thinking about and doing law.