Sloth-Nielsen, JuliaKruuse, Helen2018-09-122018-09-122013Sloth-Nielsen, J. & Kruuse, H. (2013). A maturing manifesto: The constitutionalisation of children’s rights in South African jurisprudence 2007-2012. International Journal of Children’s Rights, 21: 646–678. http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718182-021020050927-5568http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718182-02102005http://hdl.handle.net/10566/4041This article represents the next in a series of five-year overviews of children’s rights in the courts in South Africa. Using the Convention on the Rights of the Child and the African Charter on the Welfare of Children as a point of departure, the study suggests that it is in the public sphere that children’s rights have had their most impact in the period under review. The article highlights eight areas of distinction in this five-year period: these include judicial approval of resource mobilisation for the fulfilment of children’s rights, emphasis on the quality of and standards in education; the development of innovative remedies to deal with unreasonable state measures affecting children, and an increasing focus on the right to dignity of the child. The authors conclude that the scope of the cases cited points to the growing insertion of children’s rights considerations in increasingly diverse areas of legal interaction. Furthermore, the authors posit that the CRC and ACRWC – together with non-binding sources of international law – have substantively informed and enriched the jurisprudence of South African courts.enThis is the author-version of the article published online at: http://dx.doi.org/10.1163/15718182-02102005Children’s separate interestsResource mobilisationEducationInnovative remediesThe right to dignityThe constitutional childConvention on the Rights of the ChildAfrican Charter on the Rights and Welfare of the ChildNon-binding sources of international lawA maturing manifesto: The constitutionalisation of children’s rights in South African jurisprudence 2007-2012Article