The anthropology of law

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Where to find it

Law Library — 3rd Floor Collection (3rd floor)

Call Number
K487.A57 P57 2013
Status
Available

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Summary

Questions about the nature of law, its relationship with custom, and the distinctive form of legal rules, categories, and reasoning, are placed at the centre of this introduction to the anthropology of law. It brings empirical scholarship within the scope of legal philosophy, while suggesting new avenues of inquiry for the anthropologist.Going beyond the functional and instrumental aspects of law that underlie traditional ethnographic studies of order and conflict resolution, The Anthropology of Law considers contemporary debates on human rights and new forms of property, but also delves into the rich corpus of texts and codes studied by legal historians, classicists, and orientalist scholars. Studies of the great legal systems of ancient China, India, and the Islamic world, unjustly neglected by anthropologists, are examined alongside forms of law created on their peripheries. The coutumes of medieval Europe, the codes drawn up by tribal groups in Tibet and the Yemen, village laws on both sides of the Mediterranean, and the intricate codes of saga in Iceland provide rich empirical detail for the author's analysis of the cross-cultural importance of the form of law, as text or rule, and the relative marginality of its functions as an instrument of government or foundation of social order. Carefully-selected examples shed new light upon the interrelations and distinctions between law, custom, and justice. Gradually an argument unfolds concerning the tensions between legalistic thought and argument, and the ideological or aspirational claims to embody justice, morality, and religious truth which lie at the heart of what we think of as law.

Contents

  • 1 Introduction p. 1
  • Social anthropology p. 2
  • Law as an anthropological subject p. 4
  • Law as a polythetic category p. 7
  • Law in legal anthropology p. 9
  • Legalism p. 13
  • Law and history p. 15
  • Legal theory p. 16
  • An anthropology of law p. 23
  • 2 Order, Disputes, and Legal Pluralism p. 26
  • Law and social order p. 26
  • Law as social order p. 31
  • Law as conflict resolution p. 33
  • Legal pluralism p. 38
  • Law and government p. 42
  • Tamanaha's 'non-essentialist' concept p. 44
  • Law and the colonial encounter p. 46
  • 3 Legal Thought: Meaning and Power p. 52
  • Legal categories and judicial processes p. 53
  • Law as a system of meaning p. 56
  • Meaning in legal theory p. 59
  • Law and power p. 63
  • Codified laws p. 67
  • 4 Law as an Intellectual System p. 73
  • Law in the Hindu world p. 73
  • Hindu law in practice p. 76
  • What was Hindu law? p. 78
  • Roman law p. 81
  • Roman law in practice p. 85
  • What was Roman law? p. 90
  • The Islamic world p. 93
  • Islamic law in practice p. 97
  • What was Islamic law? p. 101
  • Law as scholarship p. 103
  • 5 Ideals, Tradition, and Authority p. 106
  • Penal law in China p. 107
  • Respect for the ancestral past p. 110
  • The emperors p. 112
  • Law in ancient Greece p. 113
  • Idealism and the ancient law-givers p. 115
  • The English common law p. 118
  • Antiquity and the ancient constitution p. 121
  • Ancestry, conservatism, and legal thought p. 124
  • 6 Legalism p. 131
  • Law and custom p. 131
  • Legalism in the courts p. 133
  • The codification of custom p. 135
  • Rules and categories p. 139
  • Literacy p. 144
  • Formalism and its critics p. 148
  • Jurisprudence and pluralism p. 150
  • Pluralism and authority p. 153
  • 7 Moral Order: Aspiration and Emulation p. 158
  • Tribes, villages, and moral order p. 158
  • Eastern Tibet p. 159
  • Tribal Yemen p. 162
  • Boundaries and borders p. 164
  • Village communities p. 168
  • Practice and moral order p. 171
  • Borrowing and aspiration p. 176
  • Early medieval Europe p. 178
  • In the shadow of the shari'a p. 179
  • After Rome p. 181
  • Financial laws in the British Virgin Islands p. 185
  • Morality and ideals p. 186
  • 8 Law and the State p. 188
  • States and laws p. 188
  • Law above the ruler p. 192
  • Indic law in south-east Asia p. 193
  • Medieval Europe p. 194
  • Southern Baptists p. 196
  • Tibet p. 198
  • The modern state p. 201
  • Against and beyond the state p. 202
  • International and transnational laws p. 206
  • Law Merchant p. 207
  • Pluralism and formalism p. 209
  • Human Rights p. 212
  • Laws and rulers p. 215
  • 9 Conclusion p. 217
  • Law and legal anthropology p. 218
  • Legalism p. 220
  • Legal thought: law and equity p. 223
  • Social ideals p. 226
  • Legalism and idealism p. 228
  • References p. 231
  • Index p. 257

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