The right of ‘interested parties’ to be heard during an anti-dumping investigation conducted by the National Treasury on behalf of the Minister of Finance

The right of ‘interested parties’ to be heard during an anti-dumping investigation conducted by the National Treasury on behalf of the Minister of Finance

Author Clive Vinti

ISSN: 1996-2177
Affiliations: Lecturer, Faculty of Law, University of the Free State
Source: South African Law Journal, Volume 137 Issue 4, p. 713-732

Abstract

The purpose of this article is to advocate for the right of ‘interested parties’ to be  heard during the National Treasury anti-dumping investigation conducted on behalf  of the Minister of Finance when the Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition  makes a ‘request’ to impose or vary an anti-dumping duty in terms of ss 55 and 56  of the Customs and Excise Act 91 of 1964. This inquiry was prompted by recent  jurisprudence from the High Court of South Africa which asserted that the Minister  of Finance has a discretion when the Minister of Trade, Industry and Competition  requests that an anti-dumping duty must be imposed or varied on a particular product.  In this regard, the National Treasury of South Africa investigates the desirability  of the imposition or variation of an anti-dumping duty on behalf of the Minister of  Finance. However, interested parties are never heard by the Minister of Finance or the  National Treasury. This poses the question whether interested parties must be heard  during the National Treasury’s investigation on whether anti-dumping duties must  be imposed or varied. 

Opposing cynical evictions: A framework of appropriate remedies

Opposing cynical evictions: A framework of appropriate remedies

Author Jeremy Phillips

ISSN: 1996-2177
Affiliations: LLM Student, University of Fort Hare
Source: South African Law Journal, Volume 137 Issue 4, p. 733-762

Abstract

The South African political landscape has been darkly coloured by inhumane  evictions, exacted to design the social and geographic landscape of the country along  discriminatory lines. A notorious brand of eviction, often resorted to by the apartheid  state, is the ‘cynical eviction’ — an unlawful eviction where the evictee’s home is  demolished and destroyed. Shamefully, cynical evictions have persisted post-1994.  The cynicality of such an eviction lies in the fact that, by destroying the materials of the  home, the defence of impossibility precludes the evictee relying on the mandament van  spolie. While there is consensus that evictees are entitled to relief, there is disagreement  on which remedy should deliver that relief. Developing the mandament van spolie  to bypass the defence of impossibility has been touted as the ideal remedy, whereas  the court in Tswelopele, and subsequent academic commentators, have preferred an  extraordinary remedy based directly on s 26(3) of the Constitution. This article argues  that the debate is a false dichotomy. There are subtle, but critical, differences which  distinguish both remedies. Furthermore, the possessory action should be revived as a  third alternative remedy. With three available remedies, all offering different forms of  relief, evictees have a comprehensive arsenal with which to combat cynical evictions. 

Geographical indications: The cuckoo in the IP nest

Geographical indications: The cuckoo in the IP nest

Author Sadulla Karjiker

ISSN: 1996-2177
Affiliations: Anton Mostert Chair of Intellectual Property Law, Stellenbosch University
Source: South African Law Journal, Volume 137 Issue 4, p. 763-791

Abstract

This article critically considers the recognition of Geographical Indications (‘GIs’)  as a form of intellectual property (‘IP’), and submits that it is unsuited to protection  as a distinct form of IP. It is submitted that GI protection does not accord with  established principles of IP law (most notably trade-mark law and the common law  of delict), and that its recognition has, in fact, been principally motivated by selfserving  protectionism on the part of the EU. There are no sound reasons to justify  GI protection as a distinct form of intellectual property, and its recognition says  more about the politics of IP law, rather than the merits of this form of protection.  That which is proffered as justifications for its recognition tends to be rhetoric and  unsubstantiated claims, and relies on a revisionist history of the part played by Europe  in the course of the past 400 years. This article seeks to expose the true basis on which  developing countries, former colonies of European nations, are being forced to concede  to demands to provide greater protection for European GIs, which demands harm the  ability of their producers to compete with European producers. 

Olga Martin-Otega & Claire Metven O’Brien (eds) Public Procurement and Human Rights — Opportunities, Risks and Dilemmas for the State as Buyer (2019)

Olga Martin-Otega & Claire Metven O’Brien (eds) Public Procurement and Human Rights — Opportunities, Risks and Dilemmas for the State
as Buyer (2019)

Author Allison Anthony

ISSN: 1996-2177
Affiliations: N/A
Source: South African Law Journal, Volume 137 Issue 4, p. 807-810

Abstract

None