The Proprietary Consequences of Customary Marriages: Challenges in the New Regime(s)?
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2024
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Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal
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Abstract
The law governing marriage in South Africa is in transition. There
are currently two proposals to reform the proprietary
consequences of marriages in South Africa, namely a Marriage
Bill [B43-2023], and a South African Law Reform Commission
Discussion Paper to review aspects of matrimonial property law.
This article assesses the effectiveness of the proposed reform
in addressing the current regulatory challenges related to the
proprietary consequences of customary marriages. It argues
that the piecemeal jurisprudential development of the law has
not been effectively reconciled, and this must be addressed in
any future reform. However, the Marriage Bill proposed by the
Department of Home Affairs is not an answer. The Bill ignores
customary notions of property and creates several conceptual
difficulties such as potentially leaving customary law marriages
without a matrimonial proprietary regime. The South African Law
Reform's Discussion Paper, which reviews aspects of
matrimonial property law, holds great promise because it
proposes a change in the default matrimonial proprietary system
and the exclusion of family property from the marital estate. The
proposals must be reconciled and informed by living customary
law practices to deliver the much-anticipated law reform.
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Reference:
Osman, F. 2024. The Proprietary Consequences of Customary Marriages: Challenges in the New Regime(s)?. Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal.:1-29. http://hdl.handle.net/11427/39591