The Power of Procedure

IF 0.6 Q1 HISTORY Journal of Global Slavery Pub Date : 2022-03-28 DOI:10.1163/2405836x-00701004
Imran Canfijn, Karwan Fatah-Black
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Abstract

While contemporary observers judged Suriname’s legal system to be extremely cruel, arbitrary, and above all outrageously biased, the written record reveals that its criminal court closely adhered to procedure, weighed slave testimony and did not cast judgement outright. This article asks what place slave punishment and legal procedure had in the Suriname system of slavery, and how and why this changed over time. The Suriname legal system offers an almost continuous record of criminal trials held before its main colonial court as well as a record of its locally passed regulations. Research indicates that the court turned away from severe physical mutilation and capital punishments over the course of the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries. The decline of plantocratic dominance and its overbearing use of force suggests a gradual embedding of the court system, making it a predictable institution promoting (an unequal) social cohesion. This leads us to suggest that the amelioration policies of the nineteenth century were not a transformation in the legal system resulting solely from a metropolitan intervention, but were partly a continuation of a trend in the colony itself.
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程序的力量
虽然当时的观察家认为苏里南的法律制度极其残酷、武断,最重要的是偏见严重,但书面记录显示,苏里南的刑事法庭严格遵守程序,权衡奴隶的证词,并没有直接作出判决。这篇文章探讨了奴隶惩罚和法律程序在苏里南的奴隶制度中所处的地位,以及随着时间的推移,这种情况如何以及为什么发生了变化。苏里南的法律制度提供了在其主要殖民地法院进行的几乎连续的刑事审判记录,以及当地通过的法规记录。研究表明,在十八和十九世纪的过程中,宫廷不再使用严重的肢体残害和死刑。植物统治地位的衰落及其对武力的霸道使用表明,法院系统正在逐渐嵌入,使其成为一个可预测的促进(不平等的)社会凝聚力的机构。这使我们认为,19世纪的改善政策并不是仅仅由于大都会干预而导致的法律体系的转变,而是部分地延续了殖民地本身的趋势。
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来源期刊
Journal of Global Slavery
Journal of Global Slavery Arts and Humanities-History
CiteScore
1.10
自引率
28.60%
发文量
22
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