South African Journal of Criminal Justice
SV Hoctor (Editor-in-chief); SS Terblanche; GP Kemp; R Kuhn
ISSN: 1011-8527
Year: 1987 – Current
Published: Tri-annually
Category: Juta’s Law Journals
About this publication
This bilingual publication (English and Afrikaans) provides an arena for discussion of issues affecting the criminal justice system. It is an accredited, specialist legal journal publishing articles, comments, surveys of recent cases and book reviews in the field of criminal justice, with a particular emphasis on Southern Africa. The focus of the journal is criminal law, criminal procedure, evidence, international criminal law and criminology.
Abstracts
Volume / Issue
Volume 31 Issue 2, 2018
Recent Case: Constitutional aspects of criminal justice
Authors: Warren Freedman
Source: South African Journal of Criminal Justice, pp 323 – 338 (2018 I2)
Recent Case: Sentencing
Authors: Annette van der Merwe
Source: South African Journal of Criminal Justice, pp 308 – 322 (2018 I2)
Recent Case: Law of evidence
Authors: Lirieka Meintjes-van der Walt
Source: South African Journal of Criminal Justice, pp 295 – 307 (2018 I2)
Recent Case: Criminal procedure
Authors: Pieter du Toit
Source: South African Journal of Criminal Justice, pp 282 – 294 (2018 I2)
The admissibility of evidence obtained through human rights violations in Mauritius
Authors: Jamil Mujuzi
Source: South African Journal of Criminal Justice, pp 260 – 281 (2018 I2)
Quantification of damages for malicious prosecution: A comparative analysis of recent South African and Commonwealth case law (1)
Authors: Chuks Okpaluba
Source: South African Journal of Criminal Justice, pp 235 – 259 (2018 I2)
The judicial relevance and impact of victim impact statements in the sentencing of rape offenders
Authors: Amanda Spies
Source: South African Journal of Criminal Justice, pp 212 – 234 (2018 I2)
Electronic instruments – A presumption of reliability, a presumption of regularity, judicial notice, or none of the above?
Authors: Lee Swales
Source: South African Journal of Criminal Justice, pp 189 – 211 (2018 I2)