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23 Potchefstroom Elec. L.J. [i] (2020)

handle is hein.journals/per23 and id is 1 raw text is: 



















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Author

David  Holness
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-1635-0078

Affiliation

University of KwaZulu-Natal,
South  Africa

Email  Holness@ukzn.ac.za

Date  Submission

21  January 2019

Date  Revised

10  December   2019

Date  Accepted

12  December   2019

Date  published

16  January 2020

Editor  Prof T Mmusinyane

How   to cite this article

Holness   D Improving Access  to
Justice through  Law  Graduate
Post-Study  Community Service in
South  Africa PER/  PELJ2020(23)
- DoI
http://dx.doi.org/10.17159/1 727-
3781  /2020/v23i0a5968

Copyright



DOI
http://dx.doi.org/10.1 7159/1 727-
3781  /2020/v23i0a5968


Abstract

Access to justice for all in South Africa, as most clearly set out in sections 34 and 35 of the
Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, is necessary to realise various other
fundamental rights and to improve living standards. There are insufficient free legal services
available to the indigent in South Africa, especially in civil matters, thereby often making
meaningful  access to  justice unattainable. This study considers possible approaches,
challenges and opportunities for law graduate community service in South Africa (hereinafter
community service) to expand the ambit and impact of free legal services to the indigent. This
would promote the constitutional imperative of access to justice, focussing on civil matters. This
study concentrates on the access to justice potential of and challenges to such community
service. Such challenges will be shown to include its proper utilisation and control through the
adequate supervision of graduates. This paper argues that graduate community service has
the capacity to promote better access to justice and hence that steps should be taken for its
introduction in some form.

Community   service and means  for law graduates to perform this as a necessary part of
vocational training before entering the legal profession are provided for in section 29 of the
Legal Practice Act 28 of 2014 (LPA). But despite parts of the Act being operative, community
service is neither in operation nor do regulations yet exist for its implementation.

The specific vocational training element(s) for law graduates is worthy of separate study and is
not the focus of this paper. Such a separate study would include opportunity creation - such as
gaining the necessary practical experience and the establishment of employment opportunities
- and training challenges for graduates during community service.

In the pre-LPA era it would have been necessary to focus more on whether community service
for law graduates should be included in legislation or not as part of graduates' vocational training
and as a key component of free legal service delivery. Some such arguments are alluded to as
community  service has yet to be implemented and its implementation is not a fait accompli. But
because it is now included in the LPA as a legal aid service delivery possibility, this study instead
focusses on  the need for the effective and appropriate implementation and operation of
community service to turn the requirements and encouraging promise of the LPA on community
service into reality. The paper explores issues such as the necessary  and appropriate
supervision and placement of law graduates completing community service. The research very
briefly touches on whether community service would best be compulsory for graduates as part
of their vocational training or merely one possible route towards admission to the legal
profession. Lessons are sought for legal community service in South Africa from existing
medical post-study community service schemes as to the role which such schemes have played
in expanded service provision and impediments experienced in reaching such goals. These
lessons are applied to proposals for the implementation and  operation of law graduate
community  service.

This study considers how community service could and should be a key component of a multi-
faceted and co-ordinated approach to expand and improve free legal services for the indigent
in civil matters in South Africa with its gross inequality, unemployment and poverty. Forthis goal
to be realised, there must be mechanisms for its effective roll-out and operation.


Keywords

Law  graduates;  community  service; Legal Practice Act; South Africa;
constitutional rights; legal aid; civil legal matters; supervision.

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