当地方法律阻碍冲突解决:尼日尔三角洲妇女的石油抗议

Laine Munir
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引用次数: 1

摘要

摘要:在尼日利亚盛产石油的尼日尔三角洲地区,当地居民、政府和在该地区运营的外国石油公司之间的冲突由来已久。和平的和武装的男性干部都领导了反对采掘作业的动员,但从2002年开始,所有女性的示威活动相对突然出现,似乎与男性分开了。基于定性的实地数据,本民族志案例研究探讨了2002年至2012年期间,女性对法律的认知如何影响了她们为应对与石油有关的不满而进行抗议的决定。它询问了为什么妇女避免使用正式的国家法律,而在以权利为基础的正式法律事务中仍然融入当地的传统法律。研究的主要发现是,女性认为国家制定的成文法本质上是好的,但个人的腐败导致成文法无法解决冲突。他们还认为地方法律和州法律之间存在二元对立,土著领导人扮演着把关人的角色,控制着两个法律层面之间的出入。这项研究表明,传统法律可能阻碍尼日利亚妇女解决与石油有关的问题的能力。
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When Local Law Impedes Conflict Resolution: Women's Oil Protests in the Niger Delta
ABSTRACT:Nigeria's oil-rich Niger Delta region hosts a long-standing conflict among residents, the government, and foreign oil companies operating in rural areas. Both peaceful and armed cadres of men have led mobilizations against extractive operations but then all-female demonstrations arose relatively suddenly, seemingly separate from men, starting in 2002. Based on qualitative field data, this ethnographic case study explores how women's perceptions of law informed their decision to protest in response to their oil-related grievances from 2002 to 2012. It asks why women avoided the use of formal state law, remaining embedded in localized traditional law for formal, rights-based legal matters. The main findings are that women see written law from the state as inherently good but corrupting individuals as the reason it cannot be galvanized for conflict resolution. They also perceive a binary between local and state law, with indigenous leaders acting as gatekeepers controlling access between the two legal planes. This study suggests that traditional law may impede women's ability to resolve their oil-related problems in Nigeria.
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