By Zuko Komisa
Today is officially Mandisa Maya’s first day in her new role.
She is the country’s first female deputy chief justice since apartheid was abolished in 1994 when the country became a constitutional democracy.
Maya started working as an attorney’s clerk in a Mthatha-based law practice.
She later advanced to the positions of a court interpreter and town prosecutor for the Magistrates’ Court. Before starting her pupillage at the Johannesburg Bar, she worked as an assistant state law adviser.
Later, she joined the Transkei Society of Advocates as a practising advocate.
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She also worked as a Law Lecturer at the University of Transkei.
She holds B.Proc from the University of Transkei, LLB (University of Natal), and LLM (Duke University, North Carolina in the USA).
She is a Fulbright Scholar, was a fellow of Georgetown University law and gender programme as well as a Commonwealth Foundation fellow and a Duke Law School International Alumnus.
Justice Maya assumes her role as the Deputy Chief Justice of the Republic of South Africa today, 1 September 2022. #ocj_rsa #judiciary pic.twitter.com/EmKzefduNH
— RSAJudiciary (@OCJ_RSA) September 1, 2022
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