Who is a Refugee?: Twenty-Five years of Domestic Implementation and Judicial Interpretation of the 1969 OAU and 1951 UN Refugee Conventions in Post-Apartheid South Africa
As a party to the UN Refugee Convention and the OAU Refugee Convention, South Africa is obligated to apply international refugee law when addressing the protection needs of asylum seekers in the country. The Refugees Act, 1998 encapsulates the cardinal principles of the two conventions. This essay d...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Indiana journal of global legal studies 2020-06, Vol.27 (2), p.129-205 |
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Format: | Artikel |
Sprache: | eng |
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Zusammenfassung: | As a party to the UN Refugee Convention and the OAU Refugee Convention, South
Africa is obligated to apply international refugee law when addressing the
protection needs of asylum seekers in the country. The Refugees Act, 1998
encapsulates the cardinal principles of the two conventions. This essay
discusses how government officials and judges have interpreted and applied these
principles in asylum application cases. These cases demonstrate that officials
are either not always fully conversant with the legal obligations, incumbent
upon the government, arising from both international law and domestic law or
purposefully ignore them. For the most part, officials tend to treat asylum
seekers presumptively as economic migrants rather than bona fide refugees
entitled to proper scrutiny under the criteria set out in the refugee
conventions. This approach has resulted in gaps between legal protection and
practical protection of refugees in South Africa and has on several occasions
been criticized and rejected by courts, including the Constitutional Court of
South Africa. |
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ISSN: | 1080-0727 1543-0367 |
DOI: | 10.2979/indjglolegstu.27.2.0129 |