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The Jurisprudence of Nelson Mandela: A Testament to Dignity

Thesis ( LLD)--Stellenbosch University, 2026.

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Van der Merwe, Anton Johan
Other Authors: Botha, Henk
Format: Thesis
Language:English
Published: Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University 2026
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access_status_str Open Access
author Van der Merwe, Anton Johan
author2 Botha, Henk
author_browse Botha, Henk
Van der Merwe, Anton Johan
author_facet Botha, Henk
Van der Merwe, Anton Johan
author_sort Van der Merwe, Anton Johan
collection Thesis
dc_rights_str_mv Stellenbosch University
description Thesis ( LLD)--Stellenbosch University, 2026.
format Thesis
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institution Stellenbosch University (South Africa)
language English
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:46:22.874Z
license_str Other — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from SUNScholar — Stellenbosch University Repository
publishDate 2026
publishDateRange 2026
publishDateSort 2026
publisher Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
publisherStr Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
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spelling oai:scholar.sun.ac.za:10019.1/135694 The Jurisprudence of Nelson Mandela: A Testament to Dignity Van der Merwe, Anton Johan Botha, Henk Stellenbosch University. Faculty of Law. Dept. of Public Law. Thesis ( LLD)--Stellenbosch University, 2026. Van der Merwe, A. J. 2026. The Jurisprudence of Nelson Mandela: A Testament to Dignity. Unpublished doctoral dissertation. Stellenbosch: Stellenbosch University [online]. Available: https://scholar.sun.ac.za/items/d4d75b1a-bdb7-4b68-8a50-01ee78f89dba In this dissertation, I advance the thesis that Nelson Mandela’s jurisprudence reflects a testament to dignity. Specifically, I argue that Mandela’s worldview can illuminatingly be translated into a Kantian-like discourse on human dignity, a discourse that reveals a Dworkinian-like jurisprudential orientation centred around three interconnected legal values: the nature of justice, the rule of law, and human rights. The study posits that the residue of Mandela’s education in the Anglo-European philosophy of law and his upbringing in the African philosophy of ubuntu was an abiding sense of the interrelationship between law and morality, between justice and the rule of law, and the role of justice as that singular socio-legal imperative that serves to dignify the lives of citizens and to affirm their essential worth as human beings. Such an orientation, filtered through a worldview premised on human dignity and a political morality founded on freedom, equality, and democracy, provides the portal through which Mandela’s jurisprudence is revealed. The investigation unfolds through systematic unpacking of the history of the tripartite political struggle between African, Afrikaner, and Briton into which Mandela was born, followed by an examination of the jurisprudential traditions to which he was exposed during his formative years, legal studies, and practice of law. Next, it turns to Mandela’s political awakening and the evolution of his thinking towards a Kantian-like concept of human dignity as the animating principle of his worldview which, in turn, engaged a Dworkinian-like orientation in his jurisprudence. The study then analyses Mandela’s words and symbolic actions in speeches and trials up to and including the 1995 Truth & Reconciliation Commission and the interim Constitution of 1993 and final Constitution of 1996, to test the posited thesis about Mandela’s political morality, worldview, and jurisprudence. The study identifies in Mandela’s words and symbolic deeds a coherent jurisprudence that can credibly be described as a jurisprudence premised on a Grundnorm of human dignity. Such jurisprudence intuitively perceived justice—a sense of fairness “drawn from dignity and aim[ed] at dignity”—as the normative opposite of apartheid and as foundational to the legal and constitutional order of the “ideal society” to which he committed his life and for which he was prepared to die. Doctoral 2026-04-08T07:31:29Z 2026-04-08T07:31:29Z 2026-03 Thesis https://scholar.sun.ac.za/handle/10019.1/135694 en Stellenbosch University 252 pages application/pdf Stellenbosch : Stellenbosch University
spellingShingle Van der Merwe, Anton Johan
The Jurisprudence of Nelson Mandela: A Testament to Dignity
title The Jurisprudence of Nelson Mandela: A Testament to Dignity
title_full The Jurisprudence of Nelson Mandela: A Testament to Dignity
title_fullStr The Jurisprudence of Nelson Mandela: A Testament to Dignity
title_full_unstemmed The Jurisprudence of Nelson Mandela: A Testament to Dignity
title_short The Jurisprudence of Nelson Mandela: A Testament to Dignity
title_sort jurisprudence of nelson mandela a testament to dignity
url https://scholar.sun.ac.za/handle/10019.1/135694
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