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The right to basic education is enshrined in section 29(1) of the Constitution of the Republic of South Africa, 1996, which clearly states that basic education is extended to 'everyone'. In 2016 the Eastern Cape Department of Education took a decision to stop funding the education of learners without birth certificates, passports or permits. In 2019 the High Court in Makhanda declared this decision unconstitutional and found that all learners, irrespective of their documentary status or their nationality, are entitled to attend school in South Africa. This article considers the Centre for Child Law & Others v Minister of Basic Education & Others judgment and its role in advancing the right to basic education in South Africa. It maps the events leading up to the litigation, the strategy in bringing the matter and the findings of the Court, and considers the challenges in implementing the judgment. It finds that while the findings of the Court have provided some clarity on the interpretation of section 29(1) of the Constitution and its application to undocumented learners, some ambiguity in the framing of the order and a lack of awareness of the judgment among schools and provincial education departments have hampered implementation. In addition, new legislative and policy developments may undo some of the strides occasioned by the judgment.
Maistry et al. (Thu,) studied this question.