ABSTRACT

This book presents an important ethnographic and theoretical advance in legal anthropological scholarship by interrogating customary law, customary courts and legal pluralism in sub-Saharan Africa. It highlights the vitality and continued relevance of customary justice at a time when customary courts have waned or even disappeared in many postcolonial African nations.

Taking Botswana as a casestudy from in-depth fieldwork over a fifty-year period, the book shows, the ‘customary’ is robustly enduring, central to settling interpersonal disputes and constitutive of the local as well as the national public ethics. Customary law continues to be constitutionally protected, authorised by the country’s past as an authentic, viable legacy, from the British colonial period of indirect rule to the postcolonial state’s present development as a highly bureaucratised democracy. Along with a theoretical overview of the underlying issues for the anthropology and sociology of law, the book documents customary law as living law in the context of legal pluralism. It takes a legal realist approach and highlights the need to pay close attention to the lived experience of justice and its role in the production of legal subjectivities.

The book will be valuable to Africanists but also, more broadly, to social scientists, social historians and socio-legal scholars with interests in law and social change, public ethics and personal morality, and the intersection of politics and judicial decision making.

chapter 1|20 pages

Introduction

Living law, chiefship and legal pluralism in Botswana

part I|110 pages

Public ethics and legal pluralism

chapter 2|23 pages

Looking back

Small-man politics and the rule of law 1

chapter 3|14 pages

Tlholego

Nature, culture, destiny, chiefship, and the moral economy

chapter 5|23 pages

An unburied past

Chiefly succession and the politics of memory

chapter 6|16 pages

What's in a name?

The struggle for identity in the statutory courts

part II|128 pages

Legal subjectivities, ethics, and pluralism

chapter 7|19 pages

Divorce as process, Botswana style

Customary courts, gender activism, and legal pluralism in historical perspective

chapter 8|19 pages

Adultery redefined

Changing decisions of equity in customary law as ‘living law' in Botswana

chapter 9|23 pages

A case of inheritance

From citizens' forum to magisterial justice in Botswana's customary courts

chapter 10|25 pages

A case of insult

Emotion, law, and witchcraft accusations

chapter |16 pages

Conclusion