Pursuing Justice in Africa: Competing Imaginaries and Contested Practices

Pursuing Justice in Africa: Competing Imaginaries and Contested Practices

Pursuing Justice in Africa: Competing Imaginaries and Contested Practices

Pursuing Justice in Africa: Competing Imaginaries and Contested Practices

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Overview

Pursuing Justice in Africa focuses on the many actors pursuing many visions of justice across the African continent—their aspirations, divergent practices, and articulations of international and vernacular idioms of justice. The essays selected by editors Jessica Johnson and George Hamandishe Karekwaivanane engage with topics at the cutting edge of contemporary scholarship across a wide range of disciplines. These include activism, land tenure, international legal institutions, and postconflict reconciliation.

Building on recent work in sociolegal studies that foregrounds justice over and above concepts such as human rights and legal pluralism, the contributors grapple with alternative approaches to the concept of justice and its relationships with law, morality, and rights. While the chapters are grounded in local experiences, they also attend to the ways in which national and international actors and processes influence, for better or worse, local experiences and understandings of justice. The result is a timely and original addition to scholarship on a topic of major scholarly and pragmatic interest.

Contributors:
Felicitas Becker, Jonathon L. Earle, Patrick Hoenig, Stacey Hynd, Fred Nyongesa Ikanda, Ngeyi Ruth Kanyongolo, Anna Macdonald, Bernadette Malunga, Alan Msosa, Benson A. Mulemi, Holly Porter, Duncan Scott, Olaf Zenker.


Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780821446485
Publisher: Ohio University Press
Publication date: 10/31/2018
Series: Cambridge Centre of African Studies
Sold by: Barnes & Noble
Format: eBook
Pages: 336
File size: 2 MB

About the Author

Jessica Johnson is a lecturer in the Department of African Studies and Anthropology at the University of Birmingham, UK. Her work focuses on gender and justice in a matrilineal area of Malawi.

George Hamandishe Karekwaivanane is a lecturer in the Centre of African Studies at the University of Edinburgh, UK. His work focuses on the interaction of law and politics in Zimbabwean history, as well as the social and political impacts of digital media.

Table of Contents

Index Contents Acknowledgments Introduction: Re-centering Justice in African Studies Part 1: Morality, Religion, and Languages of Justice 1: Competing Conceptions of Justice in Colonial Buganda 2: Legal Pluralism and the Pursuit of a Just Life 3: Social Justice and Moral Space in Hospital Cancer Care in Kenya 4: Relational Justice and Transformation in Postapartheid South Africa Part 2: Gender Justice 5: Chilungamo and the Question of LGBTQ+ Rights in Malawi 6: Justice Intervention 7: Conflicting Conceptions of Justice and the Legal Treatment of Defilement Cases in Malawi 8: “Home People” and “People of Human Rights” Part 3: Resources, Conflict, and Justice 9: Out of the Mouths of Babes 10: Good and Bad Muslims 11: Land Restitution (Old and New), Neotraditionalism, and the Contested Values of Land Justice in South Africa 12: Transitional Justice and Ordinary Justice in Postconflict Acholiland Afterword Bibliography Contributors
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