Tjakie Naude

Professor of Private Law at University of Cape Town

Schools

  • University of Cape Town

Links

Biography

University of Cape Town

Tjakie Naude is a Professor of Private Law. Her main fields of interest are the Law of Contract, including Specific Contracts, Consumer Protection and Comparative Law.

She received her BA and LLB degrees cum laude from the University of Stellenbosch, and was awarded the Hofmeyr van der Merwe medal for the graduating LLB student who performed the best in the degree programme. After qualifying as an attorney and working for a Lloyd's syndicate in Edinburgh, Scotland, she returned to Stellenbosch as a Lecturer.

Tjakie completed her doctorate on preference contracts (rights of first refusal) under the supervision of Professor Gerhard Lubbe. Part of the research for her doctorate was conducted at the Chair of Professor Reinhard Zimmermann in Regensburg, Germany, during 2001. During 2006 she was a visiting fellow at the Oxford Institute of European and Comparative Law, where she undertook comparative research on unfair contract terms legislation and on standard contract terms more generally. She also undertook comparative research on the incorporation of standard terms into contracts at the Max Planck Institute for Foreign and International Private Law in Hamburg during 2006. She joined UCT in January 2009. Together with Prof Hans Micklitz, she organised a conference on Consumer Law in Anglophone Africa in 2017. Papers presented at this conference have been published in a special issue of the 2018 Journal of Consumer Policy. She is a co-editor of the looseleaf Commentary on the Consumer Protection Act, published by Juta.

Expertise/ Research Interests

Law of Contract, including Specific Contracts, Consumer Protection and Comparative Law.

Teaching

Tjakie teaches the Law of Contract as well as Sale, Lease and Consumer Protection.

Read about executive education

Other experts

Looking for an expert?

Contact us and we'll find the best option for you.

Something went wrong. We're trying to fix this error.