Staff
Designation: Prof.
E-mail: MNjotini@ufh.ac.za
Contact Number: +27437047531
Position: Dean
Campus: East London
Faculty: Law
Department: All Departments
Address: 6, Gasson Building, 50 Oxford Street
LinkedIn: https://www.linkedin.com/in/mzukisi-njotini-6514ab52/?originalSubdomain=za
Google Scholar: https://scholar.google.com/citations?user=1anSxxQAAAAJ&hl=en
Research Gate: https://www.researchgate.net/profile/Mzukisi-Njotni
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Prof Mzukisi Njotini is the Dean of the Faculty of Law, University of Fort Hare. He holds an LLB (Vista University), LLM (cum laude) in Information Technology Law (UNISA), MBA (UJ) and LLD (UNISA). He is a seasoned academic who worked as the Vice-Dean: Teaching and Learning, and Associate Professor in the Faculty of Law at the University of Johannesburg (UJ). As Vice-Dean. He also worked as Professor and Director of the School of Law at the University of Limpopo (UL), and Senior Lecturer and Lecturer in the College of Law at the University of South Africa. As Director, he led and oversaw, inter alia, the re-accreditation of the LLB programme by the Council on Higher Education (CHE). Prof Njotini developed several courses and programmes, the most notable being the Research Methodology in Law and Criminal Justice (UNISA) and the Short Learning Programme in Law and the Fourth Industrial Revolution (4IR) (UJ). Prof Njotini’s areas of specialisation include Information and Communications Technology (ICT) Law, 4IR and the Law, Cybersecurity and the Law, Legal Philosophy, and Law and Ethics. He has contributed extensively to academic knowledge in his chosen area. Furthermore, he has taught multiple courses, for example, Legal Ethics, Corporate Governance and the Law, Law for Social Work, Law of Delict, Cyber Law, and Law and Industry. Prof Njotini did his post-doctoral research with the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, Faculty of Law, Oxford University in the UK.
Examining the'objects of property rights'-lessons from the Roman, Germanic and Dutch legal history
Disruptive technologies and the future of regulations – ICT regulatory structure(s) determined
Exposing the ICT regulatory dilemma: the test for governments
Law and Industry 4.0 – selected perspectives on a new scholarship of teaching and learning
Regulatory overreach v judicial overreach : Du Bruyn NO & others v Karsten
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