ABSTRACT

The 18 papers in this volume, originally published in 1969 in English and French, with summaries in the other language, define and analyze in their wider social contexts the fundamental ideas and procedures to be found in African traditional systems of law. They assess the needs and problems of adaptation to changing conditions. The comprehensive introduction by Allott, Epsteina nd Gluckman provides a framework of analysis. It deals with the search for a common terminology in which to analyse and compare the different systems of customary law proceedings and evidence, codification and recording, reason and the occult, the conception of legal personality, succcession and inheritance, land rights, marriage and affiliation, injuries, liability and responsibility.

chapter |96 pages

Introduction

part |250 pages

Special Studies

chapter III|14 pages

Whither Lay Justice in Africa?

chapter VII|17 pages

Legal Personality in African Law

chapter XVII|15 pages

Contract in Tswana Law