The New Politics of Judicial Appointments in Southern Africa

P. Brett
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Abstract

Political scientists analyze the global rise of judicial appointment commissions as a response to judicialized politics. They argue that appointment processes have formalized to include more constituencies now affected by judicial decisions. This article presents evidence from Southern Africa confounding their expectations. In this region, formalization has social as well as political origins. Over the last two decades, the senior judiciary has suddenly become subject to the same demands for organizational accountability and descriptive representation that sociologists of other professions have been documenting for decades. Throughout the region, therefore, it has become increasingly difficult to defend opaque practices inherited from British (and South African) colonialism. Twenty years ago, Namibia, Botswana, Lesotho, and Swaziland/Eswatini all recruited most appellate judges from abroad through informal channels. In every country, this system has come under pressure from a variety of local sources. Yet those demanding reform have always been able to mobilize new international orthodoxies that require the judiciary to represent its society and make itself accountable to profane, external audiences. These new orthodoxies have acquired an unusual power in Southern Africa thanks to their embodiment in South Africa’s own post-apartheid transition, and long-standing moral imperatives to “localize” senior expatriate positions in postcolonial states.
南部非洲司法任命的新政治
政治学家分析司法任命委员会的全球兴起是对司法化政治的回应。他们认为,任命程序已经正式纳入了更多现在受司法裁决影响的选区。这篇文章提出了来自南部非洲的证据,与他们的预期相混淆。在这个地区,形式化既有社会根源,也有政治根源。在过去的二十年里,高级司法机构突然变得受制于对组织责任和描述性代表的同样要求,其他职业的社会学家几十年来一直在记录这些要求。因此,在整个地区,捍卫从英国(和南非)殖民主义继承下来的不透明做法变得越来越困难。20年前,纳米比亚、博茨瓦纳、莱索托和斯威士兰/斯威士兰都通过非正式渠道从国外招募了大部分上诉法官。在每个国家,这一制度都受到各种当地来源的压力。然而,那些要求改革的人总是能够动员新的国际正统观念,要求司法机构代表其社会,并对世俗的外部受众负责。这些新的正统观念在南部非洲获得了一种不同寻常的力量,这要归功于它们在南非自身后种族隔离过渡时期的体现,以及长期以来在后殖民国家将高级外籍人士职位“本地化”的道德要求。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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