The authors take a scalpel to South Africa's system of criminal
justice during the Apartheid era. They focus on the case of the
Sharpeville Six to analyse how criminal justice was used to make
convictions easy to secure. Analysing the technicalities of the
criminal law, as well as the quality of evidence and judicial
reasoning in the case against the Six, Parker and Mokhesi-Parker
also convey vividly through letters from death row, the sense these
people made of their impending executions and how an international
campaign to save their lives succeeded with only 18 hours to spare.
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