The Mercury

Top-rated UKZN researcher and human rights activist celebrates 50 years in academia

- THANDIWE JUMO

ADVOCATING for social justice, inspired by his meetings with Nelson Mandela; establishi­ng one of the first university law clinics in South Africa; being a National Research Foundation A-rated researcher; and teaching some of South Africa’s best legal minds. These are some of the iconic achievemen­ts for which law professor David McQuoid-Mason of the University of KwaZulu-Natal’s Centre for Socio-Legal Studies is being honoured during the celebratio­n of his 50th anniversar­y in academia at the university.

McQuoid-Mason began teaching law in 1971 at the erstwhile University of Natal. He not only establishe­d the first law clinic in Durban in 1973, but also founded the first Street Law legal literacy programme in South Africa in 1986. This led to him visiting more than 132 countries to conduct clinical legal education and medico-legal training, as well as assisting with the drafting of legal aid legislatio­n.

Formerly the Dean of the Howard College Law School at the erstwhile University of Natal, a position he held for 13 years, McQuoid-Mason specialise­s in medical law and ethics, access to justice, and legal education. He has taught legal luminaries such as South Africa’s former Chief Justice Sandile Ngcobo, current Chief Justice Mogoeng Mogoeng, Deputy Chief Justice Raymond Zondo and National Director of Public Prosecutio­ns Advocate Shamila Batohi. During the apartheid struggle, he worked side-by-side with the late Chief Justice Pius Langa, and other colleagues from the National Associatio­n of Democratic Lawyers and the Mass Democratic Movement.

McQuoid-Mason is the President of the Commonweal­th Legal Education Associatio­n; a former member of the

Human Rights, Ethics and Profession­al Practice Committee of the Health Profession­s Council of South Africa; and a member of the Steering Committee of the Global Alliance for Justice Education. He was awarded a Special Mention by Unesco for his work in human rights education, and the “Advocate of the Year” award by Street Law Incorporat­ed (USA). He has received honorary doctorates for his worldwide access to justice and clinical legal education work from the University of Windsor in Canada and the University of Northumbri­a in the United Kingdom.

To date, McQuoid-Mason has published more than 200 articles in law and medical journals, contribute­d more than 70 chapters to books, and co-authored 24 books and manuals. Never one to slow down, even during a pandemic, he is currently assisting two technical subcommitt­ees of the Ministeria­l Advisory Committee on Covid-19, as well as the Gender and Human Rights Commission and private lawyers with Olympic gold medallist, Caster Semenya’s appeal to the European Court on Human Rights. He is also assisting with the review of the

Ministry of Health’s proposed standards accreditat­ion criteria for hospitals and general practition­ers. He advises nine private hospitals and a number of public hospitals’ ethics committees, individual doctors, academic medical colleagues, and other healthcare personnel on the legal and ethical implicatio­ns of different aspects of the pandemic and is currently designing training programmes for health practition­ers in Ghana and paralegals in Somalia.

In celebratio­n of McQuoid-Mason’s legacy, UKZN will in June launch an investment fund that will disburse bursaries to financiall­y deserving LLB students who excel in human rights law. An internatio­nal webinar themed, “Clinical Legal Education: Internatio­nal Best Practices Pre- Present and Post- the Covid-19 Pandemic” will be hosted in September. The celebratio­n of his achievemen­ts will culminate in a commemorat­ive publicatio­n that will feature research papers from top clinical legal education teachers from all the continents.

Dean of the School of Law, Professor Managay Reddi said that McQuoid-Mason’s colleagues are proud to have someone of his stature in their midst. “We feel incredibly privileged to have been the beneficiar­ies of David’s expert legal knowledge, visionary ideas and wisdom during the years. We look forward to celebratin­g his rare and wonderful milestone of 50 years at UKZN and wish him many more years in academia.”

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Professor David McQuoid-Mason

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