Lower state courts are the focus of both international and national access to justice policies and programs but remain understudied in Uganda. Drawing on 3 years of ethnographically informed research on citizen engagement with a busy magistrates' court in post-war northern Uganda, we show the diverse reasons why citizens appeal to the rule-of-law in places where state authority is contested. In a context of limited statehood, against a backdrop of high-levels of corruption and inefficiency in the judicial system, people turn to lower state courts for normative, pragmatic, and tactical reasons that are not well captured by conventional measures of procedural justice. Our findings extend theory on citizen-authority relations in a global conte...
Unlike in the constitutions of other African countries such as Botswana and Lesotho, where the rela...
In recent debates between social scientists and human rights and legal scholars, many anthropologist...
Perceptions of the International Criminal Court have undergone a deep malaise, particularly on the A...
Lower state courts are the focus of both international and national access to justice policies and p...
Lower state courts are the focus of both international and national access to justice policies and p...
The expansive literature on law and justice across Africa emphasizes why people do not use lower sta...
When do citizens obey the law? What determines when people conform to or dismiss legal/institutional...
This article analyzes the first peace talks to take place against the backdrop of an International C...
Although JP courts did not escape the general deterioration of Congolese administrative structures, ...
This policy brief presents strengths and weaknesses of state and traditional land justice institutio...
In this Article, I take up a focused analysis of the Uganda prosecutions, considering both the inter...
This article analyzes the first peace talks to take place against the backdrop of an International C...
In December 2003, the Government of Uganda referred the situation in conflict-torn northern Uganda t...
Developing countries are hard-pressed to provide affordable, good-quality dispute settlement to thei...
Part I of this Note outlines the background of the conflict in Uganda, the problems and benefits tha...
Unlike in the constitutions of other African countries such as Botswana and Lesotho, where the rela...
In recent debates between social scientists and human rights and legal scholars, many anthropologist...
Perceptions of the International Criminal Court have undergone a deep malaise, particularly on the A...
Lower state courts are the focus of both international and national access to justice policies and p...
Lower state courts are the focus of both international and national access to justice policies and p...
The expansive literature on law and justice across Africa emphasizes why people do not use lower sta...
When do citizens obey the law? What determines when people conform to or dismiss legal/institutional...
This article analyzes the first peace talks to take place against the backdrop of an International C...
Although JP courts did not escape the general deterioration of Congolese administrative structures, ...
This policy brief presents strengths and weaknesses of state and traditional land justice institutio...
In this Article, I take up a focused analysis of the Uganda prosecutions, considering both the inter...
This article analyzes the first peace talks to take place against the backdrop of an International C...
In December 2003, the Government of Uganda referred the situation in conflict-torn northern Uganda t...
Developing countries are hard-pressed to provide affordable, good-quality dispute settlement to thei...
Part I of this Note outlines the background of the conflict in Uganda, the problems and benefits tha...
Unlike in the constitutions of other African countries such as Botswana and Lesotho, where the rela...
In recent debates between social scientists and human rights and legal scholars, many anthropologist...
Perceptions of the International Criminal Court have undergone a deep malaise, particularly on the A...