The Frontier Crimes Regulation: A History in Documents
In the 1840s, as British Indian colonial authorities displaced the Sikh government in the Punjab and districts bordering Afghanistan, they attempted to replicate a pattern of rule evolved from previous military occupations of north Indian regions. Certain 'structures of power' and an 'ideology of authority' shaped a hierarchical relationship between the colonial state and regional societies. A crucial concern was to establish a law and order regime that minimized conflict and legitimated British authority.

Across British India, through the implementation of police, judicial, and ideological structures, authorities asserted claims of colonial preeminence and a monopoly over coercive power. This volume collects correspondence and regulations related to the British North West Frontier province. They document the complex colonial adaptation of legal codes and levers of power to control what were seen as archaic but enduring social, moral, and cultural norms based in Pakhtun customary social and devotional practices. Throughout this history, alternative voices disputed any claims to colonial legal or moral hegemony. Features of this history, including the latest version of the Frontier Crimes Regulation, continued into the early twenty-first century as active, highly debated features of state administrative policies.

This volume contains primary source documents related to the writing of the Punjab Frontier Crimes Regulation of 1887 and ensuing years of debate over the need for additional revisions to the FCR. In the years after 11 September 2001, a period of turmoil in Afghanistan and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan, such debates were urgently continued, even as power relations meant they were less urgently acted upon.
1116856317
The Frontier Crimes Regulation: A History in Documents
In the 1840s, as British Indian colonial authorities displaced the Sikh government in the Punjab and districts bordering Afghanistan, they attempted to replicate a pattern of rule evolved from previous military occupations of north Indian regions. Certain 'structures of power' and an 'ideology of authority' shaped a hierarchical relationship between the colonial state and regional societies. A crucial concern was to establish a law and order regime that minimized conflict and legitimated British authority.

Across British India, through the implementation of police, judicial, and ideological structures, authorities asserted claims of colonial preeminence and a monopoly over coercive power. This volume collects correspondence and regulations related to the British North West Frontier province. They document the complex colonial adaptation of legal codes and levers of power to control what were seen as archaic but enduring social, moral, and cultural norms based in Pakhtun customary social and devotional practices. Throughout this history, alternative voices disputed any claims to colonial legal or moral hegemony. Features of this history, including the latest version of the Frontier Crimes Regulation, continued into the early twenty-first century as active, highly debated features of state administrative policies.

This volume contains primary source documents related to the writing of the Punjab Frontier Crimes Regulation of 1887 and ensuing years of debate over the need for additional revisions to the FCR. In the years after 11 September 2001, a period of turmoil in Afghanistan and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan, such debates were urgently continued, even as power relations meant they were less urgently acted upon.
39.95 In Stock
The Frontier Crimes Regulation: A History in Documents

The Frontier Crimes Regulation: A History in Documents

by Robert Nichols
The Frontier Crimes Regulation: A History in Documents

The Frontier Crimes Regulation: A History in Documents

by Robert Nichols

Paperback

$39.95 
  • SHIP THIS ITEM
    Qualifies for Free Shipping
  • PICK UP IN STORE

    Your local store may have stock of this item.

Related collections and offers


Overview

In the 1840s, as British Indian colonial authorities displaced the Sikh government in the Punjab and districts bordering Afghanistan, they attempted to replicate a pattern of rule evolved from previous military occupations of north Indian regions. Certain 'structures of power' and an 'ideology of authority' shaped a hierarchical relationship between the colonial state and regional societies. A crucial concern was to establish a law and order regime that minimized conflict and legitimated British authority.

Across British India, through the implementation of police, judicial, and ideological structures, authorities asserted claims of colonial preeminence and a monopoly over coercive power. This volume collects correspondence and regulations related to the British North West Frontier province. They document the complex colonial adaptation of legal codes and levers of power to control what were seen as archaic but enduring social, moral, and cultural norms based in Pakhtun customary social and devotional practices. Throughout this history, alternative voices disputed any claims to colonial legal or moral hegemony. Features of this history, including the latest version of the Frontier Crimes Regulation, continued into the early twenty-first century as active, highly debated features of state administrative policies.

This volume contains primary source documents related to the writing of the Punjab Frontier Crimes Regulation of 1887 and ensuing years of debate over the need for additional revisions to the FCR. In the years after 11 September 2001, a period of turmoil in Afghanistan and the Federally Administered Tribal Areas of Pakistan, such debates were urgently continued, even as power relations meant they were less urgently acted upon.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780199066735
Publisher: Oxford University Press
Publication date: 08/31/2013
Pages: 350
Product dimensions: 6.40(w) x 9.40(h) x 0.90(d)

About the Author

Robert Nichols is Professor of History at the Richard Stockton College of New Jersey. He teaches South Asian and Indian Ocean history and has researched regional and interregional histories of the early modern and modern periods. His recent publications, including articles and chapters in edited volumes, have included work on the Pashtun communities of Pakistan and Afghanistan. Subjects of interest have included regional historiography, migration, and language policy.

Table of Contents

Introduction1. An early 1886 correspondence between the Punjab government and the Peshawar Division Commissioner discussing the 'whole question of criminal administration of the Peshawar District' and the problem of violence in the Division, 'the present lamentable prevalence of homicide and murder'. The document summarizes official views towards the adoption of a 'new Frontier Regulation'2. A later 1886 correspondence between the Punjab government and the Peshawar Division Commissioner continuing the discussion of possible changes in criminal investigations and procedures3. The Punjab Frontier Crimes Regulation, 18874. A November 1887 'Gazette Notification' about the 'classes' subject to the FCR5. A summer 1892 letter discussing FCR cases in regards to the use of official jirgas6. A fall 1892 letter discussing FCR cases related to issues about women7. A spring 1893 letter discussing FCR issues8. A June 1893 letter discussing jirgas and issues related to women9. Correspondence beginning in fall 1894 related to FCR jirgas10 Correspondence from late 1897 discussing amendments to the 1887 FCR11. Report of the Frontier Crimes Regulation Committee, 189912. A summer 1900 collection of correspondence and tables of statistics on crime and FCR related issues13. The Punjab Frontier Crimes Regulation, 1887 (As Amended) 190014. 'Customary Law of the Main Tribes in the Peshawar District', by J.G. Lorimer (1899), revised by J.G. Acheson, 1934Index
From the B&N Reads Blog

Customer Reviews