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37 S. Afr. J. on Hum. Rts. 1 (2021)

handle is hein.journals/soafjhr37 and id is 1 raw text is: SOUTH AFRICAN JOURNAL ON HUMAN RIGHTS
2021, VOL. 37, NO. 1, 1-6                                            (O~ Taylor &Francis
https:H/doi.org/l 0.1080/02587203.2021 .2000111                           b~~Fao ru
INTRODUCTION
-'rdutont        special issue: Class action           litgaio       in
Jeff Handmaker
International Institute of Social Studies of Erasmus University Rotterdam, The Netherlands
This special issue on class action litigation in the South African Journal on Human
Rights was initiated by a call for papers that was drafted by South African lawyer
Carina du Toit. It was indeed she who had originally conceived of this idea for the spe-
cial issue, identified potential authors who were working in this field and co-chaired
(with me) an authors' colloquium webinar that the South African Journal on Human
Rights organised on 26 June 2020. With this substantial basis, I was happy to take the
idea forward through to publication on behalf of the Journal.
The call for papers that was circulated in October 2019 triggered a lot of interest
from academics and practitioners alike. However, like so many other initiatives, the
global Covid- 19 pandemic caught us entirely off-guard, and between lockdowns, home
schooling, rising infection rates and hospital admissions, campus closures and other
unprecedented disruptions, we were forced to improvise, and to sharpen our IT skills.
What would have been an in-person colloquium in Johannesburg became an online
webinar through Zoom. Rather than meet and discuss in person, we resorted to email,
Skype, Teams, Zoom and other forms of internet-based communication. But we man-
aged in the end to produce a special issue that covers the topic well, consisting of three
case notes and four full-length articles from top scholars and experienced practitioners.
Human rights litigation has been a recurring topic in the Journal since we were first
established as the Lawyers for Human Rights Bulletin in the late-1970s, which was re-
named the South African Journal on Human Rights in 1985. Since 1994, public interest
litigation has received increasing attention. A 2011 special issue on that topic - co-
edited by Jackie Dugard, Jonathan Klaaren and myself - also touched on the challeng-
ing prospects of bringing class actions, namely: Stuart Wilson's contribution on hous-
ing rights.'
However, specific and comprehensive attention to class actions, as a particular form
of legal mobilisation, has received less attention. This is of little surprise since, as
Cheryl Loots observed already in 1994, the opportunities for standing to bring such
cases in South African courts have traditionally been restricted, especially prior to the
CONTACT Jeff Handmaker  handmaker@iss nI  Kortenaerkade 12, 2518 AX Den Haag, The Netherlands
1S Wilson 'Litigating housing rights in Johannesburg's inner city: 2004 - 2008' (2011) 27 South African Journal on
Human Rights 127-151.
C© 2021 South African Journal on Human Rights

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