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It is also an intellectual project that aims to "disinfect" academic activities that are believed to have little connection with the objective pursuit of knowledge and truth. The presumption is that if curricula, theories, and knowledge are colonized, it means they have been partly influenced by political, economic, social and cultural ...
Act no. Short title 1: Post Office Additional Appropriation Act, 1970: 2: Post Office Part Appropriation Act, 1970: 3: Post Office Re-adjustment Amendment Act, 1970: 4: The Apostolic Faith Mission of South Africa (Private) Amendment Act, 1970: 5: Additional Appropriation Act, 1970: 6: Railways and Harbours Part Appropriation Act, 1970: 7
Act number originally assigned to the Constitution First Amendment Act: 36: South African Olympic Hosting Act, 1997: 37: Counterfeit Goods Act, 1997: 38: Intellectual Property Laws Amendment Act, 1997: 39: South African Reserve Bank Amendment Act, 1997: 40: Unauthorised Post Office Expenditure Act, 1997: 41: South African Police Service ...
Basic Conditions of Employment Amendment Act, 2013: 21: Africa Institute of South Africa Act Repeal Act, 2013: 22: Banks Amendment Act, 2013: 23: Rates and Monetary Amounts and Amendment of Revenue Laws Act, 2013: 24: Merchant Shipping (International Oil Pollution Compensation Fund) Act, 2013: 25: Merchant Shipping (Civil Liability Convention ...
This is a list of acts of the Parliament of South Africa enacted in the years 1910 to 1919. South African acts are uniquely identified by the year of passage and an act number within that year. Some acts have gone by more than one short title in the course of their existence; in such cases each title is listed with the years in which it applied.
The South Africa Act 1909 (9 Edw. 7. c. 9) was an act of the Parliament of the United Kingdom that created the Union of South Africa out of the former Cape, Natal, Orange River, and Transvaal colonies. [1] The Act also allowed for potential admission of Rhodesia into the Union, a proposal rejected by Rhodesian colonists in a 1922 referendum. [2]
In 2003 it was realised that a new version of the act (the Judges' Remuneration and Conditions of Employment Act, 2001) had been passed and, due to a drafting error, still included the former discriminatory language. The Constitutional Court granted an order applying the reasoning of its earlier ruling to the new act. [2]