国家俘获的滑坡:干部部署是腐败的推动者,也是模糊党与国界限的推动者

Prof Cornelis F Swanepoel
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引用次数: 1

摘要

本文从法律和政治两方面考察了南非执政党非洲人国民大会(ANC)已经实施并继续实施的干部部署政策。分析首先回顾并评论南非法学中唯一一项涉及市政当局行使其公共权力进行任命的政治影响的判决,即Mlokoti诉Amathole区市政当局和另一项2009 (6)SA 354 (ECD)。Mlokoti案所证实的是,公共权力行使的法律基础是宪法及其授权立法,而不是政党政治政策,例如正在进行的干部部署实践。在对干部部署的调查中,文章随后表明,这一非国大政策,特别是从其声明的目的来看,与宪政国家不相容,反而使影子国家得以兴起。因此,毫不奇怪,政治评论员越来越多地注意到,除了宗多调查委员会的揭露之外,南非的国家抓捕实际上是从非国大为追求民族民主革命而获得政治权力时开始的。有人认为,在南非进行民族民主革命与1994年宪法公约的愿景和目标直接不一致。召开一次两党全国会议,讨论从哲学和其他方面打击腐败的方法,可能会提供一个解决方案。在这里,一个起点是重新考虑国家的反腐败战略,以适当关注这一祸害的道德原因。
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The slippery slope to State capture: cadre deployment as an enabler of corruption and a contributor to blurred party-State lines
Drawing on both legal and political sources, this article scrutinises the policy of cadre deployment that the African National Congress (ANC), the ruling party in South Africa, has implemented, and continues to apply. The analysis begins by recalling and commenting on the only reported judgment in South African jurisprudence that dealt with the political influencing of municipalities' exercise of their public power to make appointments, namely, Mlokoti v Amathole District Municipality & another 2009 (6) SA 354 (ECD). What the Mlokoti case has confirmed is that the legal foundation for the exercise of public power is found in the Constitution and its enabling legislation, and not in party political policy, such as the ongoing practice of cadre deployment. In an investigation of cadre deployment, the article then demonstrates that this ANC policy, particularly judging by its stated purpose, is incompatible with the constitutional State and, instead, enables the rise of the shadow State. Unsurprisingly, therefore, political commentators increasingly observe that, apart from the revelations at the Zondo Commission of Inquiry, State capture in South Africa in fact commenced when the ANC assumed political power in pursuit of the National Democratic Revolution. It is argued that the pursuit of a National Democratic Revolution in South Africa is directly at odds with the vision and goals of the 1994 constitutional pact. Convening a bipartisan national convention on philosophical and other approaches to the fight against corruption may offer a solution. Here, a starting point would be to reconsider the country's anti-corruption strategies to pay proper attention to the ethical causes of this scourge.
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