Type | Thesis or Dissertation - Masters of Arts |
Title | Advocating for the right to food in South Africa-an analysis of judicial activism, public interest litigation and collective action in South Africa as a strategy to secure the right to food |
Author(s) | |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2016 |
URL | http://wiredspace.wits.ac.za/bitstream/handle/10539/21891/Busiso Moyo_MA on the Right to Food(Dissertation).pdf?sequence=1&isAllowed=y |
Abstract | This dissertation is an investigation of the conditions that would bring about the legal enforcement of the right to access sufficient food in South Africa as premised on the Constitution. This is motivated by the fact that modern-society has seen a gradual increase in the occurrence of socio-economic rights being protected through the legal opportunity structure of countries, ultimately leading to public interest litigation. At present, the right to food is being violated in South Africa. Taking into account the ambit of the constitution and several international instruments that speak to its realisation and the fact that there has been litigation on other socio-economic rights, suggesting that tools for litigation are in place, it is perplexing that right to food litigation has not taken place. The research question of this paper is therefore: which factors and conditions would have to be present for there to arise public interest litigation on the right to food in South Africa? Due to the fact that literature on right to food litigation is almost non-existent, especially for the African context, this is an explorative case study. The dissertation utilises an analytical framework to study the prospect of litigation on the right to food becoming a reality. The study is largely theory-driven, relying on various sources of evidence: secondary literature, conducted-research and official state documents speaking to the countries right to food narrative. |
» | South Africa - General Household Survey 2012 |