On 28 March PILA held a major public interest law conference in Dublin, which highlighted the growth in use of law by social justice organisations. Entitled Using the Law to Challenge Injustice, this is the fourth such conference that PILA has helped to organise since 2009. With nearly 400 legal and civic society actors in attendance, the conference was a summit of public interest law ideas and discussion.
The conference’s keynote speech was delivered by former South African Constitutional Court Judge Albie Sachs. Justice Sachs was an anti-apartheid activist, and is a pioneer in the constitutional recognition of human rights. A contemporary of Nelson Mandela, he was jailed for his involvement with the South African freedom movement and survived a car bomb assassination attempt in the late 1980s. As a judge, he came to international attention in 2005 as the author of the Minister of Home Affairs v Fourie judgment, which found that a bar against same sex marriage violated South Africa’s constitution.
Click here to watch Justice Sachs' Keynote Address.
The conference was opened by Ms Joan Burton TD, Minister for Social Protection. In her address she said that the use of law by Justice Sachs and his colleagues to overcome a tyrannical system is an “exhilarating example of the law put to the greatest possible use to the benefit of a persecuted, marginalised and disadvantaged people.”
In his keynote address, Justice Sachs spoke of his initial involvement with the South African freedom movement as a young lawyer, and the beginnings of the Free Nelson Mandela campaign. He also described how, after Mandela’s release from prison, activists rolled out legal strategies to quickly advance public interest law issues.
As a Constitutional Court judge, he was involved in several judgments that were ground-breaking for common law jurisdictions like Ireland’s, including S v Makwanyane (1995) which abolished capital punishment, the Grootboom case (2000) which found the state had a duty to provide adequate housing, and Minister of Home Affairs v Fourie (2005) which found it unconstitutional to prevent same-sex couples marrying. He also presided over the Treatment Action Campaign case (2006), where the South African government was forced to provide access to HIV drugs for pregnant women based on that country’s constitutional guarantee of the right to healthcare.
PILA invited Albie Sachs to speak at this conference because to inspire attendees; to tell them that anybody – not just the elites – can use law to change society, and ignite a passion for using the law to help disenfranchised communities. Justice Sachs and the other international and Irish speakers will spoke with first-hand experience about how a state with limited resources can still prioritise human rights.
A plenary panel discussion after Justice Sachs’ address considered the potential of public interest law to create real social change. The members of that panel were FLAC Director-General Noeline Blackwell; The PILS Project's Gerry Hyland; FLAC Chairperson Peter Ward SC; Trinity College Dublin Associate Professor Gerry Whyte and Seanad Éireann Senator Katherine Zappone. The panel reflected on Albie Sachs’ keynote address, and lessons that could be applied from the South African experience to Irish human rights and public interest law practice.
The afternoon session of the conference featured four breakout sessions, where attendees engaged in practical discussion and learning on pro bono, helping NGOs to the use the law, ombudsmen and alternative routes to justice and clinical legal education. The conference concluded with refreshments and canapés and lively round-up panel hosted by journalist and TV personality Vincent Browne.
The conference was a great success and, as with previous public interest law conferences that PILA has helped to organise, shows the strength of the public interest law movement in Ireland. There was widespread media coverage of the event by major Irish print, radio and online news providers. Justice Sachs also took part in other engagements during his visit, including a lecture at University College Dublin where he was awarded the UCD Ulysses Medal. He also took part in the unveiling of a commemorative plaque outside the late Kadar Asmal’s home, where he helped to write the first draft of the ANC’s proposed Bill of Rights for a Democratic South Africa.
Click here to read more about the conference on the PILA website and to get links to media coverage of the event.