一只认为自己是鸟的蝴蝶:尼日利亚习俗法庭的身份

A. Diala
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引用次数: 4

摘要

在过去的600年里,非洲国家受到了奴隶贸易、殖民主义、跨文化交流、法律与发展运动等全球化的强烈影响。这些影响反映在伪装成国家法律的移植欧洲法律中,正在逐渐侵蚀非洲本土法律的身份。那么,尼日利亚的习惯法法庭在多大程度上反映了土著法律的身份?这个未被探索的问题对于后殖民国家法律多元主义的学术和政策观念具有重要意义。这些观念倾向于支持法律冲突,而不是在交叉的社会领域中发生的土著法律与国家法律之间的对话。通过案例分析,访谈和档案搜索,本文将尼日利亚的习惯法院呈现为假装为土著法院的英国化法院。它认为,习惯法院说明了土著法律对社会经济变化的适应。在揭示国家法律作为这些变化的关键组成部分时,文章强调了习惯法院行为者产生行为变化的方式,这些行为变化揭示了后殖民社会规范互动的适应性。研究表明,国家法律与本土法律的适应性界面为撒哈拉以南非洲地区的法律一体化提供了理论平台。
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A butterfly that thinks itself a bird: the identity of customary courts in Nigeria
Abstract Over the past 600 years, African states have been subjected to powerful influences of globalisation such as the slave trade, colonialism, transcultural exchange, and the law and development movement. These influences, which reflect in transplanted European laws masquerading as state laws, are steadily eroding the identity of indigenous African laws. So, to what extent do customary courts in Nigeria reflect indigenous law identity? This unexplored question is significant for scholarly and policy perceptions of legal pluralism in post-colonial states. These perceptions tend to favour conflict of laws, rather than the dialogue occurring between indigenous laws and state laws in intersectional social fields. Informed by case analysis, interviews, and archival searches, this article presents Nigerian customary courts as Anglicised courts pretending to be indigenous courts. It argues that customary courts illustrate indigenous law’s adaptation to socioeconomic changes. In exposing state laws as a key component of these changes, the article highlights the ways customary court actors engender behavioural changes that reveal the adaptive nature of normative interaction in post-colonial societies. It suggests that the adaptive interface of state laws and indigenous laws offers a theoretical platform for legal integration in sub-Saharan Africa.
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期刊介绍: As the pioneering journal in this field The Journal of Legal Pluralism and Unofficial Law (JLP) has a long history of publishing leading scholarship in the area of legal anthropology and legal pluralism and is the only international journal dedicated to the analysis of legal pluralism. It is a refereed scholarly journal with a genuinely global reach, publishing both empirical and theoretical contributions from a variety of disciplines, including (but not restricted to) Anthropology, Legal Studies, Development Studies and interdisciplinary studies. The JLP is devoted to scholarly writing and works that further current debates in the field of legal pluralism and to disseminating new and emerging findings from fieldwork. The Journal welcomes papers that make original contributions to understanding any aspect of legal pluralism and unofficial law, anywhere in the world, both in historic and contemporary contexts. We invite high-quality, original submissions that engage with this purpose.
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