Reading Comprehension
Passage Breakdown
South Africa has ended apartheid and must build a new legal system that protects individual rights under a constitution. This is a big change because judges, not just Parliament, can now decide if a law violates those rights, and lawyers must learn to interpret broad, vague rights without many local examples. Judges might look at other countries for help, but copying foreign decisions could be wrong if the situations differ. Finally, because the law was once used to oppress people, many citizens distrust it now, so the government must show the law will protect and help people if it wants them to obey it.
Logic Breakdown
Focus on the first paragraph's description of the old (apartheid) legal system. The passage explicitly says: 'in the past, the parliament was the supreme maker and arbiter of laws; when judges made rulings with which the parliament disagreed, the parliament simply passed new laws to counteract their rulings.' Use that sentence to select C.
Passage Stimulus
Passage Redacted
Unlock Full Passage24.According to the passage, under the apartheid system the rulings of judges were sometimes counteracted by
Correct Answer
C
The passage directly states that under the past system the parliament would 'simply pass new laws to counteract' judges' rulings. Thus judges' rulings were sometimes counteracted by new laws passed in the parliament.
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