Tuesday, 30 July 2013

THE BANGALORE PRINCIPLES OF JUDICIAL CONDUCT 2002

 
Constitutional Court Emblem


This is to my mind the high water mark for judicial conduct not only for judges, but for all magistrates, chairmen of tribunals [domestic or international] and practising lawyers, be they practising advocates or attorneys specifically in the R.S.A.

You can download the PDF format of the entire document – google “the Bangalore principles of judicial conduct 2002” and you will find it. It is interesting to note that our own late Chief Justice Pius Langa who passed away on 24 July 2013 at Johannesburg was present at the first meeting held in Vienna April 2000 [he was then Deputy Vice-President of the Constitutional Court] and he was present in his capacity as Chief Justice at the second meeting held in Bangalore February 2001 where these principles were discussed and accepted as a Draft code of Judicial Conduct. His vision was not reserved for South Africa alone. He also had a vision of judges’ conduct globally. It was, however accepted during November 2002 at the Hague and has now the status of a duly authenticated international code of judicial conduct.

When you read these principles it becomes exceptionally clear that judges are human and therefore subject to normal human frailties such as bias, intolerance and partiality. This goes to the core of the administration of justice. It underscores my view that the administration of justice is not mechanical neither is it chemical. It is applied with various degrees of success by people like you and me who happened to be practising law. Medical practitioners practise medicine subject to their own human quirks and personalities – and so do lawyers or any professional man/woman.

I intend to publish short discussions of these principles on my blog. I invite you to participate.

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