To read this content please select one of the options below:

“Ubuntu” I am because we are: COVID-19 and the legal framework for addressing communicable disease in the South African prison system

Marie Claire Van Hout (Public Health Institute, Liverpool John Moores University, Liverpool, UK)
Jakkie Wessels (Regional Court, Office of the Regional Court President, Polokwane, South Africa)

International Journal of Prisoner Health

ISSN: 1744-9200

Article publication date: 3 October 2021

Issue publication date: 24 November 2022

473

Abstract

Purpose

The purpose of the paper was to conduct a legal-realist assessment of the South African prison system response to COVID-19. Severely congested and ill-resourced prison systems in Africa face unprecedented challenges amplified by COVID-19. South Africa has recorded the highest COVID-19 positivity rate in Africa and, on March 15th 2020, declared a national state of disaster. The first prison system case was notified on April 6th 2020.

Design/methodology/approach

A legal-realist assessment of the South African prison system response to COVID-19 in the 12 months following initial case notification focused on the minimum State obligations to comply with human rights norms, and the extent to which human, health and occupational health rights of prisoners and staff were upheld during disaster measures.

Findings

A legal-realist account was developed, which revealed the indeterminate nature of application of South African COVID-19 government directives, ill-resourced COVID-19 mitigation measures, alarming occupational health and prison conditions and inadequate standards of health care in prisons when evaluated against the rule of law during State declaration of disaster.

Originality/value

This legal-realist assessment is original by virtue of its unique evaluation of the South African prison system approach to tackling COVID-19. It acknowledged State efforts, policymaking processes and outcomes and how these operated within the prison system itself. By moving beyond the deleterious impacts of the COVID-19 pandemic on the already precarious South African prison system, the authors argue for rights assurance for those who live and work in its prisons, improved infrastructure and greater substantive equality of all deprived of their liberty in South Africa.

Keywords

Acknowledgements

Marie Claire Van Hout thanks Professor Yvonne Daly at Dublin City University, Ireland, for her supervision of the legal dissertation submitted for the award of LLM. .

Citation

Van Hout, M.C. and Wessels, J. (2022), "“Ubuntu” I am because we are: COVID-19 and the legal framework for addressing communicable disease in the South African prison system", International Journal of Prisoner Health, Vol. 18 No. 4, pp. 350-370. https://doi.org/10.1108/IJPH-05-2021-0046

Publisher

:

Emerald Publishing Limited

Copyright © 2021, Emerald Publishing Limited

Related articles