Study Unit 2 - TUTORIAL QUESTIONS
Study Unit 2 - TUTORIAL QUESTIONS
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Section A
Question 1
B. The law has a moral dimension, human law ought to be judged against a higher standard of
morality.
C. Law is an instrument for oppressing the working class by favouring the ruling class.
Question 2
Which of the following statement explains what happened in the Pre-classical Law era of roman legal
history?
A. Rules of good faith and fairness, called praetorian law, were developed
Question 3
Which one of the following does NOT define what law is?
D. Law is another source of law that is primarily based on social practices and customs.
Question 4
Christopher Forsyth in his article on The Judicial Process, Positivism and Civil Liberty II, argues that
South African judges have denied the fact that by interpreting a statute may need to assign meaning
to it and thus end up making the law on that point.
A. True
B. False
Question 5
Christopher Forsyth critiques Johan Dugard's article on which one of the following points?
B. Rejection of positivism
Question 6
C. Law is descriptive.
D. Law is defined as the body of rules governing all conduct and it is enforced by the courts.
Question 7
Which one of the following does not explain the importance of roman legal history?
A. Roman law is the only subject that enables students to gain an overview of an entire system of
public law
Question 9
B. The law has a moral dimension, human law ought to be judged against a higher standard of
morality.
C. Law is an instrument for oppressing the working class by favouring the ruling class.
Question 10
The law is a set of norms distinguishing good from bad. Which one of the following is not a normative
system that influences our lives and determines our conduct?
A. Justice
B. Religion
C. Individual morality
D. Community mores
Question 11
Religion is associated with a belief in powers superior to people. Which one of the following statements
is correct in relation to law and religion?
B. In ancient times there were many societies where the functions of priests, and lawmakers were
separate and never overlapped.
C. The law and justice has existed separately, while morals and religion overlapped with various
other systems
Question 12
Which one of the following legal philosophers is the founder of legal positivism?
A. John Locke
B. Thomas Hobbes
C. Jeremy Betham
D. Sir William Blackstone
E. John Austin
F. HR Halo & E Kahn
Question 13
Which of the following statements explains what happened in the era of Justinian Law in Roman legal
history?
A. Rules of good faith and fairness, called praetorian law, were developed.
B. Codification of Roman Law that led to the compilation of the Corpus Iuris Civilis
C. Period where the Roman emperor retained all power, he replaced praetors and created a civil
service
Question 14
“ South African judiciary has been relatively frank about its law-making function in the development of
the common law. In this respect, it has shown a greater understanding of the judicial process than the
English judiciary.”
A. John Dugard
B. Christopher Forsyth
C. Kleyn & Viljoen
D. None of the above
Question 15
According to John Dugard’s article on the Judicial Process in the South African Law Journal (between
pages 182 – 186): “Natural law, inspired by Austin and Jeremy Bentham, was the predominant legal
philosophy of nineteenth-century England. It was exported to the Cape after the British annexation of
1806, where it took root and flourished.”
A. True
B. False
Question 16
According to Christopher Forsyth, legal positivism when properly understood reveals rather than
obscures the deficiencies of the judiciary?
A. True
B. False
Question 17
What is the task of courts in South Africa? Choose the most correct answer.
A. to legislate
B. to resolve legal conflicts and legal questions
C. to execute laws?
D. to hold citizens to account
Question 18
The standards of morality not only vary from one society to another, but can also change dramatically
from time to time to adapt to changes in society itself.
C. Factors such as language, etiquette, hanging values and judicial discretion make legal certainty
an illusion
D. Legal practitioners want to know what the legal position in a specific case is so that clients can
be advised and lives can be planned
Question 20
John Dugard in his article on the Judicial Process, made this comment: “I have attempted to present
the picture of a judiciary which views its task in the field of statutory interpretation as a purely
mechanical one; of a judiciary content to leave all policy matters to Parliament; of a judiciary seemingly
immune to value judgments.”
In this statement Dugard was referring to which one of the following concepts?
A. Social Contract
B. Natural Law
C. Legal Positivism
D. Legal Certainty
Section B
2.1 Define Law (provide a definition for the concept of ‘law’)
2.2 Which philosopher made this statement: “In such a state, ruled by pure instinct, a small group of
human beings such as families or tribes eventually came to the realisation that they needed to
order their society or risk extinction. This realisation gave rise to a social contract.”
2.3 Explain this statement: ‘The law . . . is a set of prescriptions for orderly conduct in a society.’
2.5.4 Feminists
2.6 Law is not the only normative system that attempts to guide human conduct, law has existed
alongside various system of religion and morality. Discuss the effect of law on these social norms
by answering the following questions.
2.6.1 There are some similarities between the content of law and the dominant religion. Explain
the connection between law and religion.
2.6.2 Law tends to intervene where people have strong moral opinions (e.g. contraception,
abortion, death penalty, treatment of animals, equality in society). Explain the connection
between law and morality.
2.6.3 Justice is a highly subjective ideal it is linked with religion, morality, and other spheres of
human belief. Explain the connection between law and justice.
2.6.4 Legal certainty means that the law is predictable, it will be applied consistently and that it
has a fixed and certain content. Why is it that certain factors make legal certainty an
illusion?