Waiver of counsel in South African child justice: An autonomous exercise of rights
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Date
Authors
Karels, M.
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
Faculty of Law, University of the Free State
Abstract
Showing abstract in English
English: The Child Justice Act 75 of 2008 created many unique procedural mechanisms for
the processing of children in conflict with the law. One such procedure relates to
mandatory legal representation, and the appointment of such to assist the court in
terms of regulation 48, where the child refuses to co-operate with the appointed
representative. This submission is a theoretical evaluation of section 35(3)(f) of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, juxtaposed against section 83 of
the Child Justice Act and its associated regulations. It posits that obligatory legal
representation is an infringement of a child offender’s constitutional right to choose
to be represented, and to select a representative of choice. The submission concedes
that the focus of the Act is the protection of child offenders. It, however, argues that
the insertion of a legal hearing phase into the current preliminary inquiry stage of
the child justice process would be an improved response to rights protection than
mandatory representation. The author uses waiver processes applicable in selected
American states to demonstrate the suggested alternative. The author concludes
that waiver is an issue deserving of attention at the pre-trial stage and that therein
a child offender is guaranteed both the protection of the best interest standard and
the autonomy to exercise the constitutional right to choose to be represented at trial.
Description
Citation
Karels, M. (2015). Waiver of counsel in South African child justice: an autonomous exercise of rights. Journal for Juridical Science, 40(1 & 2), 35-49.