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'''Legal anthropology''', also known as '''Anthropology of Law''' is a sub-discipline of ] which specializes in "the cross-cultural study of social ordering".<ref>{{cite book | author = Greenhouse, Carol J. | title = Praying for Justice: Faith, Order, and Community in an American Town | location = Ithaca | publisher = Cornell UP | year = 1986 | pages = 28}}</ref> This broad definition of the field captures the wide array of research done by legal anthropologists today. Earlier legal anthropological research often focused more narrowly on conflict management, crime, sanctions, or formal regulation. ]'s 1926 work, ''Crime and Custom in Savage Society'', explored law, order, crime, and punishment among the ].<ref>Malinowski, Bronislaw 1985 Crime and Custom in Savage Society. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman & Allanheld.</ref> | |||
'''Legal anthropology''', also known as the '''anthropology of laws''', is a sub-discipline of ] that uses an interdisciplinary approach to "the cross-cultural study of social ordering".<ref>{{cite book |author=Greenhouse, Carol J. |title=Praying for Justice: Faith, Order, and Community in an American Town |url=https://archive.org/details/prayingforjustic0000gree |url-access=registration |location=Ithaca |publisher=Cornell UP |year=1986 |pages=|isbn=9780801419713 }}</ref> The questions that Legal Anthropologists seek to answer concern how is ] present in cultures? How does it manifest? How may anthropologists contribute to understandings of law? | |||
Earlier legal anthropological research focused more narrowly on conflict management, crime, sanctions, or formal regulation. ]'s 1926 work, ''Crime and Custom in Savage Society'', explored law, order, crime, and punishment among the ].<ref>Malinowski, Bronislaw 1985 Crime and Custom in Savage Society. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman & Allanheld.</ref> The English lawyer Sir ] is often credited with founding the study of Legal Anthropology through his book '']'' (1861). An ethno-centric evolutionary perspective was pre-eminent in early Anthropological discourse on law, evident through terms applied such as ‘pre-law’ or ‘proto-law’ in describing indigenous cultures. However, though Maine’s evolutionary framework has been largely rejected within the discipline, the questions he raised have shaped the subsequent discourse of the study. Moreover, the 1926 publication of ''Crime and Custom in Savage Society'' by ] based upon his time with the Trobriand Islanders, further helped establish the discipline of legal anthropology. Through emphasizing the order present in acephelous societies, Malinowski proposed the cross-cultural examining of law through its established functions as opposed to a discrete entity. This has led to multiple researchers and ethnographies examining such aspects as order, dispute, conflict management, crime, sanctions, or formal regulation, in addition (and often antagonistically) to law-centred studies, with small-societal studies leading to insightful self-reflections and better understanding of the founding concept of law. | |||
Contemporary research in legal anthropology has sought to apply its framework to issues at the intersections of law and culture, including ], ], ]<ref>{{cite book |last=Bowen |first=John R. |title=A New Anthropology of Islam |year=2012 |publisher=Cambridge University Press |location=Cambridge UK}}</ref><ref>{{cite book |title=Political theologies: public religions in a post-secular world |url=https://archive.org/details/politicaltheolog00hent |url-access=registration |year=2006 |publisher=Fordham University Press |location=New York |editor=Hent de Vries and Lawrence E. Sullivan}}</ref> and political uprisings. | |||
Legal Anthropology remains a lively discipline with modern and recent applications including issues such as ], ], and Political Uprisings. | |||
==What is |
==What is law?== | ||
{{see also|Philosophy of law}} | |||
Legal Anthropology provides a definition of law which differs from that found within modern legal systems. Hoebel (1954) offered the following definition of law: ''"A social norm is legal if its neglect or infraction is regularly met, in threat or in fact, by the application of physical force by an individual or group possessing the socially recognized privilege of so acting."'' | |||
Maine argued that human societies passing through three basic stages of legal development, from a group presided over by a senior agnate, through stages of territorial development and culminating in an elite forming normative laws of society, stating that ''"what the juristical oligarchy now claims is to monopolize the knowledge of the laws, to have the exclusive possession of the principles by which quarrels are decided."'' | |||
In order to address the topic of Legal Anthropology, we must first address the topic of a definition of law. As defined by the Oxford Dictionary may be found here: | |||
This ], as has been stated, was subsequently replaced within the anthropological discourse by the need to examine the manifestations of law's societal function. As according to ], law has four functions: | |||
http://oxforddictionaries.com/definition/english/law?q=law | |||
However, in reference to Legal Anthropology, we may apply Hoebel’s (1954), pp. 28 definition: | |||
''“A social norm is legal if its neglect or infraction is regularly met, in threat or in fact, by the application of physical force by an individual or group possessing the socially recognized privilege of so acting”'' | |||
According to this definition many societies may be deemed as law-less; exemplified by ] (1940) when stating: | |||
''“In the strict sense of the word the Nuer don’t have law”'' | |||
This is in contrast to Maine’s argument of that human societies passing through three basic stages of development, from a group presided over by a senior agnate, through stages of territorial development and culminating in an elite forming normative laws of society. | |||
''“what the juristical oligarchy now claims is to monopolize the knowledge of the laws, to have the exclusive possession of the principles by which quarrels are decided”'' | |||
This ], as has been stated, was subsequently replaced within the anthropological discourse by the need to examine the manifestations of law’s societal function. As according to ], law has four functions: | |||
1) to identify socially acceptable lines of behaviour for inclusion in the culture. | 1) to identify socially acceptable lines of behaviour for inclusion in the culture. | ||
2) To allocate authority and who may legitimately apply force. | 2) To allocate authority and who may legitimately apply force. | ||
3) To settle trouble cases. | 3) To settle trouble cases. | ||
4) To redefine relationships as the concepts of life change. |
4) To redefine relationships as the concepts of life change. | ||
Legal theorist ], however, stated that law is a body of rules, and is a union of two sets of rules: | |||
# rules on conduct ("primary rules") <ref>H. L. A. Hart, "Law as the Union of Primary and Secondary Rules," The Concept of Law.</ref> | |||
1) the rules | |||
# rules about recognizing, changing, applying, and adjudicating on rules on conduct ("secondary rules") <ref>H. L. A. Hart, "Law as the Union of Primary and Secondary Rules," The Concept of Law.</ref> | |||
2) the rules about the rules (i.e. the rules about applying the first rule) | |||
Within modern English Theory, law is a discrete and specialized topic. Predominantly positivist |
Within modern English Theory, law is a discrete and specialized topic. Predominantly positivist in character, it is closely linked to notions of a rule-making body, the judiciary and enforcement agencies. The centralized state organisation and isolates are essentials to the attributes of rules, courts and sanctions. To learn more on this view, see Hobbes. 1651 Leviathan, part 2, chapter 26 or Salmond, J. 1902 Jurisprudence. | ||
However, this view of law is not applicable everywhere. There are many |
However, this view of law is not applicable everywhere. There are many acephalous societies around the world where the above control mechanisms are absent. There are no conceptualized and isolated set of normative rules – these are instead embodied in everyday life. Even when there may be a discrete set of legal norms, these are not treated similarly to the English Legal System's unequivocal power and unchallenged pre-eminence. Shamans, fighting and supernatural means are all mechanisms of superimposing rules within other societies. For example, within ]’s work of Across Arctic America (1927) he recounts ] nith{{typo help inline|reason=similar to ninth|date=September 2020}}-songs being used as a public reprimand by expressing the wrongdoing of someone guilty. | ||
Thus, instead of focusing upon the explicit manifestations of law, legal anthropologists have taken to examining the functions of law and how it is expressed. A view expressed Leopold |
Thus, instead of focusing upon the explicit manifestations of law, legal anthropologists have taken to examining the functions of law and how it is expressed. A view expressed by Leopold Pospisil<ref>{{cite book |author=Pospisil, Leopold |title=The Anthropology of Laws: A Comparative Theory |year=1974|pages=196}}</ref> and encapsulated by Bronislaw Malinowski: | ||
'' |
''"In such primitive communities I personally believe that law ought to be defined by function and not by form, that is we ought to see what are the arrangements, the sociological realities, the cultural mechanisms which act for the enforcement of law."''<ref>(1934: Introduction to Hogbin, Law and Order in Polynesia).</ref> | ||
Thus, law has been studied in ways that may be categorized by as: 1) prescriptive rules | |||
<ref>(1934: Introduction to Hogbin, Law and Order in Polynesia).</ref> | |||
Thus, law has been studied in ways that may be categorized by as: | |||
1) prescriptive rules | |||
2) observable regularities | 2) observable regularities | ||
3) Instances of dispute. |
3) Instances of dispute. | ||
These variances have resulted in a range of literature stretching from Schapera, I. 1938. A Handbook of Tswana Law and Custom to Evans-Pritchard, 1940, The Nuer. | |||
==Processual Paradigm: Order and Conflict== | |||
=== Legal Pluralism === | |||
Order and regulatory behaviour are required if social life is to be maintained. The scale and shade of this behaviour depends on the values and beliefs held by a society deriving from implicit understandings of the norm developed through socialization. There are socially constructed norms with varying degrees of explicitness and levels of order. Conflict may not be interpreted as an extreme pathological event but as a regulatory acting force. | |||
{{Main|Legal pluralism}} | |||
Legal scholars noted that many social structures had their own rules and processes that were similar to law, which were referred to as legal orders. The viewpoint that law should be studied together with these legal orders or cannot be seen as fundamentally distinct or separate from them has been referred to as legal pluralism. Some scholars have argued that law is distinct from other law like processes, for example because of its relationship with the state.<ref name=":0">{{Cite book|last=Pirie|first=Fernanda|url=https://www.worldcat.org/oclc/812686211|title=The anthropology of law|date=2013|isbn=978-0-19-969684-0|location=Oxford, United Kingdom|oclc=812686211}}</ref>{{Rp|38}} | |||
==Processual paradigm: order and conflict== | |||
This processual understanding of conflict and dispute became apparent and subsequently heavily theorized upon by the anthropological discipline within the latter half of the nineteenth century as a gateway to the law and order of a society. Disputes have become to be recognised as necessary and constructive over pathological whilst the stated ules of law only explain some aspects of control and compliance. The context and interactions of a dispute are more informative about a culture than the rules. | |||
Order and regulatory behaviour are required if social life is to be maintained. The scale and shade of this behaviour depends on the values and beliefs held by a society deriving from implicit understandings of the norm developed through socialization. There are socially constructed norms with varying degrees of explicitness and levels of order. Conflict may not be interpreted as an extreme pathological event but as a regulatory acting force. | |||
Classic studies deriving theories of order from disputes include Evans-Pritchard work Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic among the Azande which focused upon functional disputes surrounding sorcery and witchcraft practices. Or Comaroff and Roberts (1981) work among the Tswana which examine the hierarchy of disputes, the patterns of contact and the effect norms affect the course of dispute as norms important to dispute are rarely | |||
This processual understanding of conflict and dispute became apparent and subsequently heavily theorized upon by the anthropological discipline within the latter half of the nineteenth century as a gateway to the law and order of a society. Disputes have come to be recognised as necessary and constructive over pathological whilst the stated rules of law only explain some aspects of control and compliance. The context and interactions of a dispute are more informative about a culture than the rules. | |||
''“especially organised for jural purpose”'' | |||
Classic studies deriving theories of order from disputes include Evans-Pritchard work Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic among the Azande which focused upon functional disputes surrounding sorcery and witchcraft practices, or Comaroff and Roberts (1981) work among the Tswana which examine the hierarchy of disputes, the patterns of contact and the effect norms affect the course of dispute as norms important to dispute are rarely ''“especially organised for jural purpose.”'' <ref>(Bohannan, 1957:58).</ref> | |||
<ref>(Bohannan, 1957:58).</ref> | |||
Other examples include: |
Other examples include: | ||
], 1954. Political |
], 1954. Political Systems of Highland Burma. | ||
], 1959. Political Leadership among Swat Pathans. | ], 1959. Political Leadership among Swat Pathans. | ||
==Case |
==Case study approach== | ||
Within the history of Legal Anthropology there have been various methods of data gathering adopted; ranging from literature review of traveller/missionary accounts, consulting informants and lengthy |
Within the history of Legal Anthropology there have been various methods of data gathering adopted; ranging from literature review of traveller/missionary accounts, consulting informants and lengthy participant observation. | ||
Furthermore, when evaluating any research it is appropriate to have a robust methodology capable of scientifically analysing the topic at hand. |
Furthermore, when evaluating any research it is appropriate to have a robust methodology capable of scientifically analysing the topic at hand. | ||
The broad method of study by legal anthropologists prevails upon the Case Study Approach first developed by Llewellyn and Hoebel in The Cheyenne Way (1941) not as ''“a philosophy but a |
The broad method of study by legal anthropologists prevails upon the Case Study Approach first developed by Llewellyn and Hoebel in The Cheyenne Way (1941) not as ''“a philosophy but a technology.”'' <ref>(Pospisil, 1973: 541).</ref> | ||
This methodology is applied to situations of cross-cultural conflict and the correlating resolution, which can have sets of legal notions and jural regularities extracted from them <ref>(Bohannan, 1965: pp. 41; Pospisil, 1973).</ref> | This methodology is applied to situations of cross-cultural conflict and the correlating resolution, which can have sets of legal notions and jural regularities extracted from them. <ref>(Bohannan, 1965: pp. 41; Pospisil, 1973).</ref> | ||
This method may be safe-guarded against accusations of imposing western ideological structures as it is often an emic sentiment: for example, |
This method may be safe-guarded against accusations of imposing western ideological structures as it is often an emic sentiment: for example, | ||
''“The Tiv drove me to the case method…what they were interested in. They put a lot of time and effort into |
''“The Tiv drove me to the case method…what they were interested in. They put a lot of time and effort into cases.”'' | ||
<ref>(Bohannan, 1989: vii).</ref> | <ref>(Bohannan, 1989: vii).</ref> | ||
== Law as a system of knowledge == | |||
==Issues of Terminology and Ethnology'== | |||
Scholars of the ] note that social and power relations can both be created by the ], and influence how knowledge is created. | |||
Scholars have argued that law provides a set of categories and relations through which to see the social world.<ref name=":0" />{{Rp|54}}<ref name=":1">{{Cite book|last=Merry|first=Sally Engle|url=https://books.google.com/books?id=AEFPURuB-GoC&dq=merry%201990%20legal%20language&pg=PA8|title=Getting Justice and Getting Even: Legal Consciousness Among Working-Class Americans|date=1990-05-15|publisher=University of Chicago Press|isbn=978-0-226-52069-8|language=en}}</ref>{{Rp|8}} Individuals themselves (rather than legal professionals) will try to frame their problems in legalistic terms to resolve them.<ref name=":1" />{{Rp|130}} ] argues that these legal categories can distort reality, Yngvesson argues that the definitions themselves can create power imbalances.<ref name=":0" />{{Rp|64}} | |||
Regarding law, in Anthropology’s characteristically self-conscious manner, the comparative analysis inherent to Legal Anthropology has been speculated upon and most famously debated by ] and ]. The discourse highlights one of the primary differences between British and American Anthropology regarding fieldwork approaches and concerns the imposition of Western terminology as ethnological categories of differing societies.<ref>(Bohannan, 1956).</ref> | |||
==Issues of terminology and ethnology== | |||
Each author’s uses the Case Study Approach, however, the data’s presentation in terms of achieving comparativeness is a point of contention between them. | |||
Regarding law, in Anthropology's characteristically self-conscious manner, the comparative analysis inherent to Legal Anthropology has been speculated upon and most famously debated by ] and ]. The discourse highlights one of the primary differences between British and American Anthropology regarding fieldwork approaches and concerns the imposition of Western terminology as ethnological categories of differing societies.<ref>(Bohannan, 1956).</ref> | |||
Paul Bohannan promotes the use of native terminology presented with ethnographic meaning as opposed to any Universal categories, which act as barriers to understanding the true nature of a culture’s legal system. | |||
Each author's uses the Case Study Approach, however, the data's presentation in terms of achieving comparativeness is a point of contention between them. | |||
Advocating that it is better to appreciate native terms in their own medium, Bohannan critiques Gluckman’s work for its inherent ]. | |||
Paul Bohannan promotes the use of native terminology presented with ethnographic meaning as opposed to any Universal categories, which act as barriers to understanding the true nature of a culture's legal system. | |||
Gluckman has argued that Bohannan’s excessive use of native terminology creates barriers when attempting to achieve comparative analysis. He in turn has suggested that in order to further the cross-cultural comparative study of law, we should use English terms and concepts of law which will aid in the refinement of dispute facts and interrelations <ref>(Gluckman, 1965: 26).</ref> Thus, all native terms should be described and translated into an Anglo-American conceptual equivalent for the purpose of comparison. | |||
Advocating that it is better to appreciate native terms in their own medium, Bohannan critiques Gluckman's work for its inherent ]. | |||
==Processes == | |||
Gluckman has argued that Bohannan's excessive use of native terminology creates barriers when attempting to achieve comparative analysis. He in turn has suggested that in order to further the cross-cultural comparative study of law, we should use English terms and concepts of law which will aid in the refinement of dispute facts and interrelations. <ref>(Gluckman, 1965: 26).</ref> Thus, all native terms should be described and translated into an Anglo-American conceptual equivalent for the purpose of comparison. | |||
As disputes and order began to be recognised as categories worthy or study, interest in the inherent aspects of conflicts emerged within legal anthropology. The processes and actors involved within the events became an object of study for ethnographers as they embraced conflict as a data-rich source. | |||
==Processes and methodologies== | |||
One example of such an interest is expressed by Philip Gulliver, 1963, Social Control in an African Society in which the intimate relations between disputes are postulated as being important. He examines the patterns of alliance between actors of a dispute and the strategies that develop as a result, the roles of mediators and the typologies for intervention. | |||
As disputes and order began to be recognised as categories worthy of study, interest in the inherent aspects of conflicts emerged within legal anthropology. The processes and actors involved within the events became an object of study for ethnographers as they embraced conflict as a data-rich source. | |||
==Key Questions in Legal Anthropology== | |||
One example of such an interest is expressed by ], 1963, ''Social Control in an African Society'' in which the intimate relations between disputes are postulated as being important. He examines the patterns of alliance between actors of a dispute and the strategies that develop as a result, the roles of mediators and the typologies for intervention. Another is Sara Ross, whose work ''Law and Intangible Cultural Heritage in the City'' focuses the rubric of legal anthropology specifically onto the urban context through an "urban legal anthropology", that includes the use of ], ], and ] in urban public and private spaces.<ref>{{cite book |page=65 |title=Law and Intangible Cultural Heritage in the City |author=Sara Gwendolyn Ross |publisher=Routledge |year=2019}}</ref> | |||
Issues of Legal Pluralism. See ''Lyon, 2002 Local arbitration and conflict deferment in Punjab, Pakistan'' or ''Engel, D. 1980. Legal pluralism in an American community: perspectives on a civil trial court.'' | |||
==Key questions in legal anthropology== | |||
The legitimacy of Universal Human Rights. Political anthropologists have had much to say about the UDHR(Universal Declaration of Human Rights). Original critiques, most notably by the AAA(American Anthropological Association), argued that cultural ideas of rights and entitlement differ between societies. They warned that any attempt to endorse one set of values above all others amounted to a new western imperialism, and would be counter to ideas of cultural relativism. Most anthropologists now agree that universal human rights have a useful place in today's world. Zechenter (1997) argues there are practices, such as Indian 'sati' (the burning of a widow on her husbands funeral pyre) that can be said to be wrong, despite justifications of tradition. This is because such practices are about much more than a culturally established world view, and frequently develop or revive as a result of socio-economic conditions and the balance of power within a community. As culture is not bounded and unchanging, there are multiple discourses and moral viewpoints within any community and among the various actors in such events (Merry 2003). Cultural relativists risk supporting the most powerfully asserted position at the expense of those who are subjugated under it. | |||
*'''Issues of Legal Pluralism'''. | |||
More recent contributions to the question of universal human rights include analysis of their use in practice, and how global discourses are translated into local contexts (Merry 2003). | |||
See '' Local arbitration and conflict deferment in Punjab, Pakistan'' or ''Engel, D. 1980. Legal pluralism in an American community: perspectives on a civil trial court.'' | |||
*'''The legitimacy of Universal Human Rights'''. | |||
==Further Information== | |||
Political anthropologists have had much to say about the UDHR (Universal Declaration of Human Rights). Original critiques, most notably by the AAA (American Anthropological Association), argued that cultural ideas of rights and entitlement differ between societies. They warned that any attempt to endorse one set of values above all others amounted to a new western imperialism, and would be counter to ideas of cultural relativism. Most anthropologists now agree that universal human rights have a useful place in today's world. Zechenter (1997) argues there are practices, such as Indian 'sati' (the burning of a widow on her husband's funeral pyre) that can be said to be wrong, despite justifications of tradition. This is because such practices are about much more than a culturally established world view, and frequently develop or revive as a result of socio-economic conditions and the balance of power within a community. As culture is not bounded and unchanging, there are multiple discourses and moral viewpoints within any community and among the various actors in such events (Merry 2003). Cultural relativists risk supporting the most powerfully asserted position at the expense of those who are subjugated under it. | |||
More recent contributions to the question of universal human rights include analysis of their use in practice, and how global discourses are translated into local contexts (Merry 2003). Anthropologists such as Merry (2006) note how the legal framework of the UNDHR is not static but is actively used by communities around the globe to construct meaning. As much as the document is a product of western Enlightenment thinking, communities have the capacity to shape its meaning to suit their own agendas, incorporating its principles in ways that empower them to tackle their own local and national discontents. | |||
There are a number of useful introductions to the field of legal anthropology<ref>See, for example Moore, Sally Falk (200l rH5) ''Law and Anthropology: A Reader'', Malden, Massachusetts: Blackwell, pp.20-25</ref>). ], a leading legal anthropologist, held both a law degree and a Ph.D. in anthropology. An increasing number of legal anthropologists hold both ]s and advanced degrees in anthropology, and some teach in ]s while maintaining scholarly connections within the field of legal anthropology; examples include Rebecca French, John Conley, ], and ]. Such combined expertise has also been turned to more ] pursuits such as tribal advocacy and ] by practitioners such as Allen C. Turner, Ph.D., J.D., who works as a Chief Tribal Attorney, Tribal Anthropologist, and anthropological consultant.<ref></ref> Justin Richland, a legal anthropologist who holds both a J.D. and a Ph.D., has served as Justice Pro Tempore of the Hopi Appellate Court in addition to performing highly-regarded academic research in legal anthropology. There is a growing interest in the intersection of legal and ]. | |||
Female genital cutting (FGC), also known as female circumcision or female genital mutilation remains a hotly debated, controversial issue contested particularly among legal anthropologists and human rights activists. Through her ethnography (1989) on the practice of pharaonic circumcision among the Hofriyat of Sudan (1989) Boddy maintains that understanding local cultural norms is of crucial importance when considering intervention to prevent the practice. Human rights activists attempting to eradicate FGC using the legal framework of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UNDHR) as their justification, run the risk of imposing a set of ideological principles, alien to the culture attempting to be helped, potentially facing hostile reactions. Moreover, the UNDHR as a legal document, is contested by some as being restrictive in its prescription of what is and is not deemed a violation of a human right (Ross 2003) and overlooks local customary justifications which operate outside of an international legalistic framework (Ross 2003). Increasingly (FGC) is becoming a global issue due to increased mobility. What was once deemed a largely African practice has seen a steady increase in European countries such as Britain. Although made illegal in 1985 there have as yet been no convictions and girls as old as nine continue to have the procedure. Legislation has now also been passed in Sweden, the United States and France where there have been convictions. Black, J. A. and Debelle, G. D. (1995) "Female Genital Mutilation in Britain" ''British Medical Journal''. | |||
If looking for Anthropology departments with faculty specializing in legal anthropology in North America, try the following schools and professors: | |||
] (]), ] (], ]), ] (]), ] (]), ] (], ]), ] (Rebecca French), ] (Sally Engle Merry), ] (] and ]) and ] (Annelise Riles), and ] (]).<ref></ref> | |||
==Further information== | |||
The Association for Political and Legal Anthropology, a section of the ], is the primary professional association in the U.S. for legal anthropologists. It publishes ''PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review'', the leading U.S. journal in the field of legal anthropology, which is accessible via http://www.polaronline.org or http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1555-2934 | |||
There are a number of useful introductions to the field of legal anthropology,<ref>See, for example Moore, Sally Falk, ''Law and Anthropology: A Reader'', (edited), Blackwell, 2004, pp. 20-25, {{ISBN|1-4051-0228-4}}</ref> ], a leading legal anthropologist, held both a law degree and a PhD in anthropology. An increasing number of legal anthropologists hold both ]s and advanced degrees in anthropology, and some teach in ]s while maintaining scholarly connections within the field of legal anthropology; examples include Rebecca French, John Conley, ], and ]. Such combined expertise has also been turned to more ] pursuits such as tribal advocacy and ] by practitioners. There is a growing interest in the intersection of legal and ]. | |||
If looking for anthropology departments with faculty specializing in legal anthropology in North America, try the following schools and professors: | |||
- Journal of Legal Anthropology - http://www.anthropologies-in-translation.org/index.php?option=com_content&view=article&id=166&Itemid=110 | |||
] (]), ] (], ], ]), ] (]), ] (], ]), ] (Rebecca French), ] (Sally Engle Merry), ] (] ), and ] (]).<ref></ref> | |||
In Europe, the following scholars and schools will be good resources: | |||
== References == | |||
(SOAS University of London), Jane Cowan (University of Sussex), Ann Griffiths and Toby Kelly (University of Edinburgh), Sari Wastell (Goldsmiths, University of London), Harri Englund and Yael Navaro (University of Cambridge), and Richard Rottenburg (Martin-Luther Universität). | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
The (APLA), a section of the ], is the primary professional association in the U.S. for legal anthropologists and also has many overseas members. It publishes ''PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review'', the leading U.S. journal in the field of legal anthropology, which is accessible via http://polarjournal.org/ or http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1555-2934 | |||
*Merry, S.E. (2003) Human Rights Law and the Demonization of Culture. PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review. 26/I: 55-76. | |||
'Allegra: a Virtual Laboratory of Legal Anthropology' is an online experiment by a new generation of legal anthropologists designated to facilitate scholarly collaboration and awareness of the sub-discipline. | |||
*Zechenter, E.M. (1997) In the Name of Culture: Cultural Relativism and the Abuse of the Individual. Journal of Anthropological Research, 53, 319-347. | |||
==See also== | |||
*Bohannan, P. 1957. Justice and Judgement among the Tiv. | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
* ] | |||
== References == | |||
*Comaroff and Roberts. 1977. The Invocation of Norms in Dispute Settlement: The Tswana Case. Social Anthropology and Law. | |||
{{reflist}} | |||
*Gulliver, P. 1963. Social Control in an African Society. | |||
==Sources== | |||
*Boddy J. (1982). “Womb As Oasis: The Symbolic Context of Pharonic Circumcision in Rutal Northern Sudan” American Ethnologist. 9(4), pp. 682–698. | |||
*Bohannan, P. 1957. Justice and Judgement among the Tiv. | |||
*Comaroff and Roberts. 1977. The Invocation of Norms in Dispute Settlement: The Tswana Case. Social Anthropology and Law. | |||
*Gulliver, P. 1963. Social Control in an African Society. | |||
*Roberts, S. 1979. Order and Dispute: An Introduction to Legal Anthropology | *Roberts, S. 1979. Order and Dispute: An Introduction to Legal Anthropology | ||
*Llwellyn and Hoebel. 1941. The Cheyenne Way. | *Llwellyn and Hoebel. 1941. The Cheyenne Way. | ||
*Pospisil, L. 1974. The Anthropology of Laws: A Comparative Theory | |||
*Pospisil, L. 1974.The Anthropology of Laws: A Comparative Theory | |||
*Hamnett, I. 1977. Social Anthropology and Law. | *Hamnett, I. 1977. Social Anthropology and Law. | ||
*MacFarlane, A. . | |||
*Malinowski, B. 1926. Crime and Custom in Savage Society. | |||
*Lyon, S. Durham University Lecture Series. Department of Anthropology: . | |||
*Ross F. (2003). “Using Rights to Measure Wrongs: A Case Study of Method and Moral in the Work of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission”. In: Wilson A., Mitchell J P. eds. Human Rights in Global Perspective. Anthropological Studies of Rights, Claims and Entitlements. London: Routledge, pp 163–182. | |||
*Schapera, I. 1938. A Handbook of Tswana Law and Custom. | |||
*Wesel, U. 1985. Frühformen des Rechts in vorstaatlichen Gesellschaften, Suhrkamp Verlag, Frankfurt am Main, {{ISBN|3-518-57723-9}} (paperback) and {{ISBN|3-518-57706-9}} (hard cover) | |||
*Zippelius, R. 2011. Rechtsphilosophie, §§ 5 IV 2, 8, 9 I, 12 IV, 17 II, 19 IV, 25, C.H. Beck, Munich, {{ISBN|978-3-406-61191-9}} | |||
== Further reading == | |||
*MacFarlane, A. History of Legal Anthropology: Part One. | |||
http://www.youtube.com/watch?v=BMT7Yt_vVCI | |||
{{refbegin}} | |||
*Malinowski, B. 1926. Crime and Custom in Savage Society. | |||
* {{Cite book |editor-last1=Foblets |editor-first1=Marie-Claire |title=The Oxford Handbook of Law and Anthropology |date=2020 |url=https://www.oxfordhandbooks.com/view/10.1093/oxfordhb/9780198840534.001.0001/oxfordhb-9780198840534 |language=en |isbn=978-0-19-187622-6 |publisher=Oxford University Press }} | |||
*Lyon, S. Durham University Lecture Series. Department of Anthropology: Power and Governance. http://www.dur.ac.uk/anthropology/research/aid/aid_members/group_profile/?mode=staff&id=742 | |||
{{refend}} | |||
*Schapera, I. 1938. A Handbook of Tswana Law and Custom. | |||
*Zippelius, R. 2011. Rechtsphilosophie, §§ 5 IV 2, 8, 9 I, 12 IV, 17 II, 19 IV, 25, C.H. Beck, Munich, ISBN 978-3-406-61191-9 | |||
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Legal anthropology, also known as the anthropology of laws, is a sub-discipline of anthropology that uses an interdisciplinary approach to "the cross-cultural study of social ordering". The questions that Legal Anthropologists seek to answer concern how is law present in cultures? How does it manifest? How may anthropologists contribute to understandings of law?
Earlier legal anthropological research focused more narrowly on conflict management, crime, sanctions, or formal regulation. Bronisław Malinowski's 1926 work, Crime and Custom in Savage Society, explored law, order, crime, and punishment among the Trobriand Islanders. The English lawyer Sir Henry Maine is often credited with founding the study of Legal Anthropology through his book Ancient Law (1861). An ethno-centric evolutionary perspective was pre-eminent in early Anthropological discourse on law, evident through terms applied such as ‘pre-law’ or ‘proto-law’ in describing indigenous cultures. However, though Maine’s evolutionary framework has been largely rejected within the discipline, the questions he raised have shaped the subsequent discourse of the study. Moreover, the 1926 publication of Crime and Custom in Savage Society by Malinowski based upon his time with the Trobriand Islanders, further helped establish the discipline of legal anthropology. Through emphasizing the order present in acephelous societies, Malinowski proposed the cross-cultural examining of law through its established functions as opposed to a discrete entity. This has led to multiple researchers and ethnographies examining such aspects as order, dispute, conflict management, crime, sanctions, or formal regulation, in addition (and often antagonistically) to law-centred studies, with small-societal studies leading to insightful self-reflections and better understanding of the founding concept of law.
Contemporary research in legal anthropology has sought to apply its framework to issues at the intersections of law and culture, including human rights, legal pluralism, Islamophobia and political uprisings.
What is law?
See also: Philosophy of lawLegal Anthropology provides a definition of law which differs from that found within modern legal systems. Hoebel (1954) offered the following definition of law: "A social norm is legal if its neglect or infraction is regularly met, in threat or in fact, by the application of physical force by an individual or group possessing the socially recognized privilege of so acting."
Maine argued that human societies passing through three basic stages of legal development, from a group presided over by a senior agnate, through stages of territorial development and culminating in an elite forming normative laws of society, stating that "what the juristical oligarchy now claims is to monopolize the knowledge of the laws, to have the exclusive possession of the principles by which quarrels are decided."
This evolutionary approach, as has been stated, was subsequently replaced within the anthropological discourse by the need to examine the manifestations of law's societal function. As according to Hoebel, law has four functions:
1) to identify socially acceptable lines of behaviour for inclusion in the culture. 2) To allocate authority and who may legitimately apply force. 3) To settle trouble cases. 4) To redefine relationships as the concepts of life change.
Legal theorist H. L. A. Hart, however, stated that law is a body of rules, and is a union of two sets of rules:
- rules on conduct ("primary rules")
- rules about recognizing, changing, applying, and adjudicating on rules on conduct ("secondary rules")
Within modern English Theory, law is a discrete and specialized topic. Predominantly positivist in character, it is closely linked to notions of a rule-making body, the judiciary and enforcement agencies. The centralized state organisation and isolates are essentials to the attributes of rules, courts and sanctions. To learn more on this view, see Hobbes. 1651 Leviathan, part 2, chapter 26 or Salmond, J. 1902 Jurisprudence.
However, this view of law is not applicable everywhere. There are many acephalous societies around the world where the above control mechanisms are absent. There are no conceptualized and isolated set of normative rules – these are instead embodied in everyday life. Even when there may be a discrete set of legal norms, these are not treated similarly to the English Legal System's unequivocal power and unchallenged pre-eminence. Shamans, fighting and supernatural means are all mechanisms of superimposing rules within other societies. For example, within Rasmussen’s work of Across Arctic America (1927) he recounts Eskimo nith-songs being used as a public reprimand by expressing the wrongdoing of someone guilty.
Thus, instead of focusing upon the explicit manifestations of law, legal anthropologists have taken to examining the functions of law and how it is expressed. A view expressed by Leopold Pospisil and encapsulated by Bronislaw Malinowski:
"In such primitive communities I personally believe that law ought to be defined by function and not by form, that is we ought to see what are the arrangements, the sociological realities, the cultural mechanisms which act for the enforcement of law."
Thus, law has been studied in ways that may be categorized by as: 1) prescriptive rules 2) observable regularities 3) Instances of dispute.
Legal Pluralism
Main article: Legal pluralismLegal scholars noted that many social structures had their own rules and processes that were similar to law, which were referred to as legal orders. The viewpoint that law should be studied together with these legal orders or cannot be seen as fundamentally distinct or separate from them has been referred to as legal pluralism. Some scholars have argued that law is distinct from other law like processes, for example because of its relationship with the state.
Processual paradigm: order and conflict
Order and regulatory behaviour are required if social life is to be maintained. The scale and shade of this behaviour depends on the values and beliefs held by a society deriving from implicit understandings of the norm developed through socialization. There are socially constructed norms with varying degrees of explicitness and levels of order. Conflict may not be interpreted as an extreme pathological event but as a regulatory acting force.
This processual understanding of conflict and dispute became apparent and subsequently heavily theorized upon by the anthropological discipline within the latter half of the nineteenth century as a gateway to the law and order of a society. Disputes have come to be recognised as necessary and constructive over pathological whilst the stated rules of law only explain some aspects of control and compliance. The context and interactions of a dispute are more informative about a culture than the rules.
Classic studies deriving theories of order from disputes include Evans-Pritchard work Witchcraft, Oracles and Magic among the Azande which focused upon functional disputes surrounding sorcery and witchcraft practices, or Comaroff and Roberts (1981) work among the Tswana which examine the hierarchy of disputes, the patterns of contact and the effect norms affect the course of dispute as norms important to dispute are rarely “especially organised for jural purpose.”
Other examples include:
Leach, 1954. Political Systems of Highland Burma. Barth, 1959. Political Leadership among Swat Pathans.
Case study approach
Within the history of Legal Anthropology there have been various methods of data gathering adopted; ranging from literature review of traveller/missionary accounts, consulting informants and lengthy participant observation.
Furthermore, when evaluating any research it is appropriate to have a robust methodology capable of scientifically analysing the topic at hand.
The broad method of study by legal anthropologists prevails upon the Case Study Approach first developed by Llewellyn and Hoebel in The Cheyenne Way (1941) not as “a philosophy but a technology.”
This methodology is applied to situations of cross-cultural conflict and the correlating resolution, which can have sets of legal notions and jural regularities extracted from them.
This method may be safe-guarded against accusations of imposing western ideological structures as it is often an emic sentiment: for example,
“The Tiv drove me to the case method…what they were interested in. They put a lot of time and effort into cases.”
Law as a system of knowledge
Scholars of the sociology of knowledge note that social and power relations can both be created by the definition of knowledge, and influence how knowledge is created.
Scholars have argued that law provides a set of categories and relations through which to see the social world. Individuals themselves (rather than legal professionals) will try to frame their problems in legalistic terms to resolve them. Boaventura de Sousa Santos argues that these legal categories can distort reality, Yngvesson argues that the definitions themselves can create power imbalances.
Issues of terminology and ethnology
Regarding law, in Anthropology's characteristically self-conscious manner, the comparative analysis inherent to Legal Anthropology has been speculated upon and most famously debated by Paul Bohannan and Max Gluckman. The discourse highlights one of the primary differences between British and American Anthropology regarding fieldwork approaches and concerns the imposition of Western terminology as ethnological categories of differing societies.
Each author's uses the Case Study Approach, however, the data's presentation in terms of achieving comparativeness is a point of contention between them.
Paul Bohannan promotes the use of native terminology presented with ethnographic meaning as opposed to any Universal categories, which act as barriers to understanding the true nature of a culture's legal system.
Advocating that it is better to appreciate native terms in their own medium, Bohannan critiques Gluckman's work for its inherent bias.
Gluckman has argued that Bohannan's excessive use of native terminology creates barriers when attempting to achieve comparative analysis. He in turn has suggested that in order to further the cross-cultural comparative study of law, we should use English terms and concepts of law which will aid in the refinement of dispute facts and interrelations. Thus, all native terms should be described and translated into an Anglo-American conceptual equivalent for the purpose of comparison.
Processes and methodologies
As disputes and order began to be recognised as categories worthy of study, interest in the inherent aspects of conflicts emerged within legal anthropology. The processes and actors involved within the events became an object of study for ethnographers as they embraced conflict as a data-rich source.
One example of such an interest is expressed by Philip Gulliver, 1963, Social Control in an African Society in which the intimate relations between disputes are postulated as being important. He examines the patterns of alliance between actors of a dispute and the strategies that develop as a result, the roles of mediators and the typologies for intervention. Another is Sara Ross, whose work Law and Intangible Cultural Heritage in the City focuses the rubric of legal anthropology specifically onto the urban context through an "urban legal anthropology", that includes the use of virtual ethnography, institutional ethnography, and participant observation in urban public and private spaces.
Key questions in legal anthropology
- Issues of Legal Pluralism.
See Lyon, 2002 Local arbitration and conflict deferment in Punjab, Pakistan or Engel, D. 1980. Legal pluralism in an American community: perspectives on a civil trial court.
- The legitimacy of Universal Human Rights.
Political anthropologists have had much to say about the UDHR (Universal Declaration of Human Rights). Original critiques, most notably by the AAA (American Anthropological Association), argued that cultural ideas of rights and entitlement differ between societies. They warned that any attempt to endorse one set of values above all others amounted to a new western imperialism, and would be counter to ideas of cultural relativism. Most anthropologists now agree that universal human rights have a useful place in today's world. Zechenter (1997) argues there are practices, such as Indian 'sati' (the burning of a widow on her husband's funeral pyre) that can be said to be wrong, despite justifications of tradition. This is because such practices are about much more than a culturally established world view, and frequently develop or revive as a result of socio-economic conditions and the balance of power within a community. As culture is not bounded and unchanging, there are multiple discourses and moral viewpoints within any community and among the various actors in such events (Merry 2003). Cultural relativists risk supporting the most powerfully asserted position at the expense of those who are subjugated under it.
More recent contributions to the question of universal human rights include analysis of their use in practice, and how global discourses are translated into local contexts (Merry 2003). Anthropologists such as Merry (2006) note how the legal framework of the UNDHR is not static but is actively used by communities around the globe to construct meaning. As much as the document is a product of western Enlightenment thinking, communities have the capacity to shape its meaning to suit their own agendas, incorporating its principles in ways that empower them to tackle their own local and national discontents.
Female genital cutting (FGC), also known as female circumcision or female genital mutilation remains a hotly debated, controversial issue contested particularly among legal anthropologists and human rights activists. Through her ethnography (1989) on the practice of pharaonic circumcision among the Hofriyat of Sudan (1989) Boddy maintains that understanding local cultural norms is of crucial importance when considering intervention to prevent the practice. Human rights activists attempting to eradicate FGC using the legal framework of the Universal Declaration of Human Rights (UNDHR) as their justification, run the risk of imposing a set of ideological principles, alien to the culture attempting to be helped, potentially facing hostile reactions. Moreover, the UNDHR as a legal document, is contested by some as being restrictive in its prescription of what is and is not deemed a violation of a human right (Ross 2003) and overlooks local customary justifications which operate outside of an international legalistic framework (Ross 2003). Increasingly (FGC) is becoming a global issue due to increased mobility. What was once deemed a largely African practice has seen a steady increase in European countries such as Britain. Although made illegal in 1985 there have as yet been no convictions and girls as old as nine continue to have the procedure. Legislation has now also been passed in Sweden, the United States and France where there have been convictions. Black, J. A. and Debelle, G. D. (1995) "Female Genital Mutilation in Britain" British Medical Journal.
Further information
There are a number of useful introductions to the field of legal anthropology, Sally Falk Moore, a leading legal anthropologist, held both a law degree and a PhD in anthropology. An increasing number of legal anthropologists hold both JDs and advanced degrees in anthropology, and some teach in law schools while maintaining scholarly connections within the field of legal anthropology; examples include Rebecca French, John Conley, Elizabeth Mertz, and Annelise Riles. Such combined expertise has also been turned to more applied anthropological pursuits such as tribal advocacy and forensic ethnography by practitioners. There is a growing interest in the intersection of legal and linguistic anthropology.
If looking for anthropology departments with faculty specializing in legal anthropology in North America, try the following schools and professors: University of California, Berkeley (Laura Nader), University of California, Irvine (Susan Bibler Coutin, Bill Maurer, Justin B. Richland), Duke University (William M. O'Barr), Princeton University (Lawrence Rosen, Carol J. Greenhouse), State University of New York at Buffalo (Rebecca French), New York University (Sally Engle Merry), Harvard University (Jean Comaroff ), and George Mason University (Susan Hirsch).
In Europe, the following scholars and schools will be good resources: Vanja Hamzić (SOAS University of London), Jane Cowan (University of Sussex), Ann Griffiths and Toby Kelly (University of Edinburgh), Sari Wastell (Goldsmiths, University of London), Harri Englund and Yael Navaro (University of Cambridge), and Richard Rottenburg (Martin-Luther Universität).
The Association for Political and Legal Anthropology (APLA), a section of the American Anthropological Association, is the primary professional association in the U.S. for legal anthropologists and also has many overseas members. It publishes PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review, the leading U.S. journal in the field of legal anthropology, which is accessible via http://polarjournal.org/ or http://onlinelibrary.wiley.com/journal/10.1111/(ISSN)1555-2934
'Allegra: a Virtual Laboratory of Legal Anthropology' is an online experiment by a new generation of legal anthropologists designated to facilitate scholarly collaboration and awareness of the sub-discipline.
See also
- Anthropology
- Forensic anthropology
- Political anthropology
- Law and Society Association
- New legal realism
- Sociology of law
- Philosophy of law
References
- Greenhouse, Carol J. (1986). Praying for Justice: Faith, Order, and Community in an American Town. Ithaca: Cornell UP. pp. 28. ISBN 9780801419713.
- Malinowski, Bronislaw 1985 Crime and Custom in Savage Society. Totowa, New Jersey: Rowman & Allanheld.
- Bowen, John R. (2012). A New Anthropology of Islam. Cambridge UK: Cambridge University Press.
- Hent de Vries and Lawrence E. Sullivan, ed. (2006). Political theologies: public religions in a post-secular world. New York: Fordham University Press.
- H. L. A. Hart, "Law as the Union of Primary and Secondary Rules," The Concept of Law.
- H. L. A. Hart, "Law as the Union of Primary and Secondary Rules," The Concept of Law.
- Pospisil, Leopold (1974). The Anthropology of Laws: A Comparative Theory. p. 196.
- (1934: Introduction to Hogbin, Law and Order in Polynesia).
- ^ Pirie, Fernanda (2013). The anthropology of law. Oxford, United Kingdom. ISBN 978-0-19-969684-0. OCLC 812686211.
{{cite book}}
: CS1 maint: location missing publisher (link) - (Bohannan, 1957:58).
- (Pospisil, 1973: 541).
- (Bohannan, 1965: pp. 41; Pospisil, 1973).
- (Bohannan, 1989: vii).
- ^ Merry, Sally Engle (1990-05-15). Getting Justice and Getting Even: Legal Consciousness Among Working-Class Americans. University of Chicago Press. ISBN 978-0-226-52069-8.
- (Bohannan, 1956).
- (Gluckman, 1965: 26).
- Sara Gwendolyn Ross (2019). Law and Intangible Cultural Heritage in the City. Routledge. p. 65.
- See, for example Moore, Sally Falk, Law and Anthropology: A Reader, (edited), Blackwell, 2004, pp. 20-25, ISBN 1-4051-0228-4
- Disciplines & Subdisciplines- Legal Anthropology
Sources
- Boddy J. (1982). “Womb As Oasis: The Symbolic Context of Pharonic Circumcision in Rutal Northern Sudan” American Ethnologist. 9(4), pp. 682–698.
- Bohannan, P. 1957. Justice and Judgement among the Tiv.
- Comaroff and Roberts. 1977. The Invocation of Norms in Dispute Settlement: The Tswana Case. Social Anthropology and Law.
- Gulliver, P. 1963. Social Control in an African Society.
- Roberts, S. 1979. Order and Dispute: An Introduction to Legal Anthropology
- Llwellyn and Hoebel. 1941. The Cheyenne Way.
- Pospisil, L. 1974. The Anthropology of Laws: A Comparative Theory
- Hamnett, I. 1977. Social Anthropology and Law.
- MacFarlane, A. History of Legal Anthropology: Part One.
- Malinowski, B. 1926. Crime and Custom in Savage Society.
- Lyon, S. Durham University Lecture Series. Department of Anthropology: Power and Governance.
- Ross F. (2003). “Using Rights to Measure Wrongs: A Case Study of Method and Moral in the Work of the South African Truth and Reconciliation Commission”. In: Wilson A., Mitchell J P. eds. Human Rights in Global Perspective. Anthropological Studies of Rights, Claims and Entitlements. London: Routledge, pp 163–182.
- Schapera, I. 1938. A Handbook of Tswana Law and Custom.
- Wesel, U. 1985. Frühformen des Rechts in vorstaatlichen Gesellschaften, Suhrkamp Verlag, Frankfurt am Main, ISBN 3-518-57723-9 (paperback) and ISBN 3-518-57706-9 (hard cover)
- Zippelius, R. 2011. Rechtsphilosophie, §§ 5 IV 2, 8, 9 I, 12 IV, 17 II, 19 IV, 25, C.H. Beck, Munich, ISBN 978-3-406-61191-9
Further reading
- Foblets, Marie-Claire, ed. (2020). The Oxford Handbook of Law and Anthropology. Oxford University Press. ISBN 978-0-19-187622-6.
External links
- Association for Political and Legal Anthropology
- PoLAR: Political and Legal Anthropology Review
- Journal of Legal Anthropology