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    ISBN: 9781137403278 , 1137403276
    Sprache: Englisch
    Seiten: xiii, 252 Seiten , 1 Illustration
    Serie: Governance and limited statehood
    Paralleltitel: Erscheint auch als Kötter, Matthias Non-State Justice Institutions and the Law
    DDC: 341.2
    RVK:
    Schlagwort(e): Non-state actors (International relations) ; Non-governmental organizations ; Rule of law ; Justice ; Customary law ; Non-state actors (International relations) ; Non-governmental organizations ; Rule of law ; Justice ; Customary law ; LAW / Government / General ; POLITICAL SCIENCE / Political Freedom & Security / Human Rights ; POLITICAL SCIENCE / Government / Judicial Branch ; Aufsatzsammlung ; Religion ; Staat ; Einrichtung ; Gerichtsbarkeit
    Kurzfassung: "Traditional forms of dispute resolution have become an important aspect in the political and academic debates on law and development and in numerous cases of constitution-making and judicial reform. This book focuses on decision-making by non-state justice institutions at the interface of traditional, religious, and state laws. The authors discuss the implications of non-state justice for the rule of law, presenting case studies on traditional councils and courts in Pakistan, South Sudan, Ethiopia, Bolivia and South Africa. Looking at the legitimacy of non-state justice from various angles, this collection explores the ways in which non-state legal systems and governmental structures are embedded in official state justice institutions and how this affects the protection of human rights. "--
    Beschreibung / Inhaltsverzeichnis: Machine generated contents note:Introduction: A Bifurcated Theory of Law in Hybrid Societies: The Rule of Law and Non-state Justice; Brian Z. Tamanaha -- 1.1. The Recent Turn to Non-state Justice Institutions -- 1.2. How Hybrid Legal Situations Came About -- 1.3. A Bifurcated Law and Society -- 1.4. The Apparent Misfit with the Rule of Law -- 1.5. Conclusion -- PART I: RECOGNIZING NON-STATE JUSTICE INSTITUTIONS: FIVE CASES -- 1. Pakistan: Jirgas Dispensing Justice without State Control; Tilmann J. Röder and Naveed A. ShinwarI -- 1.1. Introduction -- 1.2. Governance and Dispute Settlement in FATA -- 1.3. Legality and Legitimacy of Decision-Making in the Existing Framework -- 1.4. Conclusions -- 2. South Sudan: Linking the Chiefs' Judicial Authority and the Statutory -- Court System; Katharina Diehl, Ruben Madol Arol and Simone Malz -- 2.1. Introduction: Traditional Authorities and Customary Law in South Sudan -- 2.2. Contemporary Legal Framework of the Judicial System -- 2.3. Decision-Making in the Customary Court System -- 2.4. Interaction of Statutory Courts and Customary Courts - Two Parallel Systems or Two Branches of the Same Legal Structure? -- 2.5. Conclusion: The Political Relevance of Chief Courts in the Post-Conflict Situa-tion of South Sudan -- 3. Ethiopia: Legal and Judicial Plurality and the Incorporation of Traditional -- Dispute Resolution Mechanisms within the State Justice System -- (Girmachew Alemu Aneme) -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. The State Justice System -- 3.3. The Incorporation of the Traditional Dispute Resolution Process of Shimglina within the State Justice System -- 3.4. The Non-State Justice Systems -- 3.5. Conclusions -- 4. Bolivia: Normative Equality between State and Customary Law. Utopia or the Future of Hybrid Normative Systems?; Lorena Ossio Bustillos -- 4.1. General Introduction to the Country and the Justice System -- 4.2. Authority System in Traditional Justice (Customary Law) -- 4.3. Constitutionalization and Legislation of Indigenous Law -- 4.4. The Mandatory Nature of the Indigenous Legal System -- 4.5. Conclusion -- 5. South Africa: Legal Recognition of Traditional Courts - Legal Pluralism in Action; Christa Rautenbach -- 5.1. Introduction -- 5.2. Historical Context -- 5.3. Contemporary Legal Framework -- 5.4. Concluding Remarks -- PART II: NON-STATE JUSTICE INSTITUTIONS AND THE LAW: CONCEPTUAL APPROACHES -- 1. Non-state Justice Institutions: A Matter of Fact and a Matter of Legislation (Matthias Kötter) -- 1.1. Non-State Justice Institutions and the Rule of Law -- 1.2. Various Degrees of Statehood and Non-State Justice Institutions -- 1.3. Incorporating Non-State Justice Institutions into the State Law System -- 1.4. Design of Regulations -- 1.5. Conclusion -- 2. From Normative Pluralism to a Pluralism of Norm Enforcement Regimes:A Governance Research Perspective; Gunnar Folke Schuppert -- 2.1. From 'Legal Pluralism' to 'Judicial Pluralism' -- 2.2. On the Enforcement Dimension of Every Normative Order -- 2.3. A Survey of the Diverse Regimes of Norm Enforcement: From Government Mandated Law Enforcement to Compliance Management within a Firm -- 2.4. A Few Critical Concluding Remarks -- 3. Legal Pluralism from the Perspective of International Law; Rüdiger Wolfrum -- 3.1. Introduction -- 3.2. Legal Pluralism and International Law in General -- 3.3. Objectives Pursued through Legal Pluralism in Selected National Legal Systems -- 3.4. Conclusion.
    Anmerkung: Introduction : a bifurcated theory of law in hybrid societies , South Sudan : linking the chiefs' judicial authority and the statutory court system , Ethiopia : legal and judicial plurality and the incorporation of traditional dispute resolution mechanisms within the State Justice System , Bolivia : normative equality between State and customary law. Utopia or the future of hybrid normative systems? , South Africa : legal recognition of traditional courts-legal pluralism in action , Non-state justice institutions : a matter of fact and a matter of legislation , From nomative pluralism to a pluralism of norm enforcement regimes : a governance research perspective , Legal pluralism from the perspective of international law
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