Law and the Study of Sub-Saharan Africa

IF 1 4区 社会学 Q2 AREA STUDIES African Studies Pub Date : 2020-02-26 DOI:10.1093/obo/9780199846733-0214
K. Mann, R. Roberts
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Abstract

In all societies, law together with social norms act to maintain the social order by creating rules and expectations about human interactions and exchanges. Changes, however, do occur. Debates about the content and meaning of social norms and about the law, legal statuses, and legal rights and expectations in African societies predated colonialism, were accelerated by the colonial encounter, and persist to this day. The long history of human contact and social and cultural change on the continent introduced new ideas and practices for resolving disputes both between members of different groups and within groups, often yielding forms of legal pluralism. Pluralistic legal thought, institutions, and practices were shaped by the spread of Islam in Africa from the 8th century and the arrival Europeans from the 15th century. Recent research on legal pluralism underscores the need to focus not only on the establishment of formal legal institutions, but also on how litigants used the multiple arenas created by overlapping systems of dispute settlement. The most useful way to think about legal pluralism is as a form of encounter between dynamic, local processes of change in indigenous societies that predated colonial conquest and continued after it and dynamic and changing forms of European colonialism. Identifying African norms, enshrined as custom, and producing customary law were essential strategies of colonial rule based on legal traditions associated with the establishment of protectorates, which separated, in principle, external and internal sovereignties. African customary law constituted a foundation of internal sovereignties associated with various forms of indirect rule. In all cases, however, African customary law was subject to colonial interventions when particular customs were considered detrimental to European assumptions about “civilization” and good governance. Metropolitan legal traditions also influenced the practice of law in colonial societies. It is important to distinguish common law as applied in colonies influenced by British practice and the civil law tradition applied in those influenced by legal systems of continental European colonial powers. South Africa forms an anomaly in that its legal system developed from a Roman-Dutch legal inheritance, a superimposed British colonial practice, and constructed African customs. Although North Africa experienced many of the same pressures from colonialism and decolonization as sub-Saharan Africa, this article does not engage fully with this region. We recognize that this is a significant gap that has colonial and postcolonial geopolitical roots and look forward to future research that better integrates these subregions. The end of colonialism accelerated the processes of legal change as independent nations both incorporated colonial law into their independent judiciaries and revised colonial-era laws to reflect changing regional and international ideas regarding human rights. Significant legal debates persist in many parts of Africa regarding gender equality, Muslim family law, criminal law, and human rights enshrined in international law.
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法律与撒哈拉以南非洲研究
在所有社会中,法律与社会规范一起通过制定有关人类互动和交流的规则和期望来维持社会秩序。然而,变化确实发生了。关于社会规范的内容和意义,以及非洲社会的法律、法律地位、法律权利和期望的辩论,早在殖民主义之前就开始了,并因殖民遭遇而加速,一直持续到今天。非洲大陆人类接触和社会文化变革的悠久历史为解决不同群体成员之间和群体内部的争端带来了新的思想和做法,往往产生各种形式的法律多元主义。8世纪以来伊斯兰教在非洲的传播和15世纪欧洲人的到来塑造了多元的法律思想、制度和实践。最近关于法律多元化的研究强调,不仅需要集中注意建立正式的法律机构,而且还需要集中注意诉讼当事人如何利用重叠的解决争端制度所造成的多种领域。思考法律多元主义的最有用的方法是将其视为一种相遇的形式,即在殖民征服之前并在殖民征服之后继续进行的土著社会中充满活力的、地方性的变革进程与欧洲殖民主义中充满活力的、不断变化的形式之间的相遇。确定被奉为习惯的非洲准则和制定习惯法是殖民统治的基本战略,其基础是与建立保护国有关的法律传统,原则上将外部主权和内部主权分开。非洲习惯法构成了与各种间接统治形式相联系的内部主权的基础。然而,在所有情况下,当某些习俗被认为有损于欧洲关于“文明”和善政的设想时,非洲习惯法就会受到殖民干预。大都市的法律传统也影响了殖民地社会的法律实践。重要的是要区分在受英国实践影响的殖民地适用的普通法和在受欧洲大陆殖民列强法律制度影响的殖民地适用的民法传统。南非的法律体系是在继承罗马-荷兰法律、叠加英国殖民实践和构建非洲习俗的基础上发展起来的,这是一个反常现象。尽管北非经历了与撒哈拉以南非洲同样的来自殖民主义和非殖民化的压力,但本文并不完全涉及该地区。我们认识到,这是一个具有殖民和后殖民地缘政治根源的重大差距,并期待未来的研究能够更好地整合这些次区域。殖民主义的结束加速了法律变革的进程,因为独立国家既将殖民法纳入其独立的司法机构,又修订殖民时代的法律,以反映关于人权的区域和国际观念的变化。在非洲许多地区,有关性别平等、穆斯林家庭法、刑法和国际法所规定的人权的重大法律辩论仍在继续。
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African Studies
African Studies AREA STUDIES-
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1.80
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