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Reforming the Purposes of Sentencing to Affirm African Values in Namibia
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 20 November 2019
Abstract
This article considers the current sentencing purposes in Namibia. It discusses the legislator's failure to articulate these purposes, leaving this to the judiciary, and identifies the dangers that arise from this legislative lacuna. It establishes that current sentencing purposes are fundamentally premised upon a retributivist philosophy, transplanted into Namibia during the colonial period. The article thus advocates for sentencing reform, aimed at restoring a paradigm based on African values. It does so by analysing African indigenous justice systems, using Ubuntu as an Afrocentric value. The article establishes how Ubuntu is contemporarily mirrored by restorative notions of justice that prioritize victims, offenders and the community, thereby asserting sentencing purposes that promote reconciliation, reparation and offender re-integration. In juxtaposing this with other sentencing purposes, the article critiques comparable jurisdictions that have recently incorporated restorative justice and proposes a set of draft sentencing purposes in the appendix.
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- Copyright © SOAS, University of London 2019
Footnotes
DPhil in law candidate, University of Oxford. This article is based on the author's dissertation submitted in the partial fulfilment of the requirements of the MSc in criminology and criminal justice at the University of Oxford. The dissertation was subsequently shortlisted in the top ten UK masters dissertations for the John Sunley Prize to celebrate impact and excellence in post-graduate research into penal issues in the UK. The author is grateful to Professor Liora Lazarus, who supervised the earlier dissertation and provided careful guidance, and Professor Julian Roberts for invaluable input to develop this article. The author also thanks Professor Sandra Fredman and members of the Oxford Human Rights Research Group for their feedback on earlier drafts.
References
1 The laws and academic commentary on the issue of sentencing (for example the Namibian Criminal Procedure Act, 1977, Act No 51 of 1977) employ the terms “sentencing” and “punishment” interchangeably. While a distinction can be made, for the purposes of this article, sentencing and punishment are employed as synonyms.
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19 Death sentences are unconstitutional: id, art 6.
20 Whipping was declared unconstitutional in Ex Parte Attorney-General: In re Corporal Punishment by Organs of State 1991 NR 178 (SC).
21 In respect of pre-constitutionalism, see: R v Swanepoel 1945 AD 444; S v Khumalo 1984 (3) SA 327 (A). In respect of post-constitutionalism, see: S v Tcoeib 1992 NR 198 (HC). See also Daniel, above at note 15; Kamahere, above at note 15.
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116 Elechi et al “Restoring justice”, above at note 74 at 77.
117 Ibid.
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128 Elias The Nature, above at note 71 at 287.
129 Id at 262.
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137 Ibid.
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139 Ibid.
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148 Id at 255.
149 Ibid.
150 Similar sentencing purposes exist under sec 7(1) of the Capital Territory Crimes (Sentencing) Act, 2005 (Australia).
151 Roberts “An analysis of the statutory statement”, above at note 147 at 267.
152 Id at 257. Sec 8 of the Sentencing Act also contains ten principles of sentencing.
153 On the application of restorative justice, see for example: R v Martin (2017) NZHC 1571 (7 July 2017), para 16; Solicitor-General v Heta [2018] NZHC 2453, para 19.
154 Sec 25.
155 Roberts “An analysis of the statutory statement”, above at note 147 at 257.
156 As amended by Sentencing Amendment Act, 2007, sec 7.
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162 Roberts et al “Public attitudes to sentencing”, above at note 160 at 82.
163 Ibid.
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167 In addition to New Zealand and Canada, the proposal borrows from sentencing reforms in England and Wales and Israel. Israeli reforms are reflected in the Penal Law (Amendment No 113) (2012) 2337 LSI 170, which is reproduced and translated into English in Roberts, J and Gazal-Ayal, O “Sentencing reform in Israel: An analysis of the statutory reforms of 2012” (2013) 46/3 Israel Law Review 479CrossRefGoogle Scholar.
168 Ashworth Sentencing and Criminal Justice, above at note 27 at 78.
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