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Sedition Laws and the Requirement of Incitement to Imminent Disorderly Conduct: A Critical Analysis of Chihana v. Republic.

This article reviews the application of laws against sedition in Southern Africa, with emphasis on Malawi's application of these laws in the 1992 trial of Chakufwa Chihana. This analysis is placed within the context of a review of the development of sedition laws in Britain and the United States and...

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Main Author: Mhango, Owen
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Institute of Criminology 2014
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access_status_str Open Access
author Mhango, Owen
author_browse Mhango, Owen
author_facet Mhango, Owen
author_sort Mhango, Owen
collection Thesis
description This article reviews the application of laws against sedition in Southern Africa, with emphasis on Malawi's application of these laws in the 1992 trial of Chakufwa Chihana. This analysis is placed within the context of a review of the development of sedition laws in Britain and the United States and a critical review of the Malawi Supreme Court of Appeal decision in Chihana v. Republic. The article revisits the Court's opinion in Chihana to recommend that Parliament amend the relevant provisions of the sedition laws by providing a set of guidelines for courts to consider when determining what constitutes permissible restrictions of speech. It concludes that the establishment of a democratic order means, if anything, speech critical of government officials and its policies should remain uninhibited, unless restriction is essential to prevent an incitement to imminent disorderly conduct. Section I discusses the early European developments of sedition law and how courts interpreted and applied them. Sections II looks at the development of sedition laws in American jurisprudence and highlights the United States Supreme Court's struggle with the early cases. Section III reviews critically the Malawi Supreme Court of Appeal's opinion in Chihana in light of similar court opinions in the Commonwealth, Europe and the United States. This review will focus on two central issues in Chihana: the first is the inclusion of 'incitement to violence' as a necessary element for sedition; the second is the court's scrutiny of what constitutes permissive restrictions of speech in the context of the sedition analysis.
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institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
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license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2014
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publisher Institute of Criminology
publisherStr Institute of Criminology
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spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/4452 Sedition Laws and the Requirement of Incitement to Imminent Disorderly Conduct: A Critical Analysis of Chihana v. Republic. Mhango, Owen This article reviews the application of laws against sedition in Southern Africa, with emphasis on Malawi's application of these laws in the 1992 trial of Chakufwa Chihana. This analysis is placed within the context of a review of the development of sedition laws in Britain and the United States and a critical review of the Malawi Supreme Court of Appeal decision in Chihana v. Republic. The article revisits the Court's opinion in Chihana to recommend that Parliament amend the relevant provisions of the sedition laws by providing a set of guidelines for courts to consider when determining what constitutes permissible restrictions of speech. It concludes that the establishment of a democratic order means, if anything, speech critical of government officials and its policies should remain uninhibited, unless restriction is essential to prevent an incitement to imminent disorderly conduct. Section I discusses the early European developments of sedition law and how courts interpreted and applied them. Sections II looks at the development of sedition laws in American jurisprudence and highlights the United States Supreme Court's struggle with the early cases. Section III reviews critically the Malawi Supreme Court of Appeal's opinion in Chihana in light of similar court opinions in the Commonwealth, Europe and the United States. This review will focus on two central issues in Chihana: the first is the inclusion of 'incitement to violence' as a necessary element for sedition; the second is the court's scrutiny of what constitutes permissive restrictions of speech in the context of the sedition analysis. 2014-07-30T18:00:16Z 2014-07-30T18:00:16Z 2014-07-30 Master Thesis Masters LLM http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4452 en application/pdf Institute of Criminology Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle Mhango, Owen
Sedition Laws and the Requirement of Incitement to Imminent Disorderly Conduct: A Critical Analysis of Chihana v. Republic.
thesis_degree_str Master's
title Sedition Laws and the Requirement of Incitement to Imminent Disorderly Conduct: A Critical Analysis of Chihana v. Republic.
title_full Sedition Laws and the Requirement of Incitement to Imminent Disorderly Conduct: A Critical Analysis of Chihana v. Republic.
title_fullStr Sedition Laws and the Requirement of Incitement to Imminent Disorderly Conduct: A Critical Analysis of Chihana v. Republic.
title_full_unstemmed Sedition Laws and the Requirement of Incitement to Imminent Disorderly Conduct: A Critical Analysis of Chihana v. Republic.
title_short Sedition Laws and the Requirement of Incitement to Imminent Disorderly Conduct: A Critical Analysis of Chihana v. Republic.
title_sort sedition laws and the requirement of incitement to imminent disorderly conduct a critical analysis of chihana v republic
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/4452
work_keys_str_mv AT mhangoowen seditionlawsandtherequirementofincitementtoimminentdisorderlyconductacriticalanalysisofchihanavrepublic