Remediation in Rwanda : grassroots legal forums / Kristin Conner Doughty.
2016
DT450.44 .D68 2016 (Map It)
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Details
Author
Title
Remediation in Rwanda : grassroots legal forums / Kristin Conner Doughty.
Published
Philadelphia : University of Pennsylvania Press, [2016]
Call Number
DT450.44 .D68 2016
ISBN
9780812247831 (alk. paper)
0812247833 (alk. paper)
9780812292398 (ebook)
0812247833 (alk. paper)
9780812292398 (ebook)
Description
283 pages : illustrations ; 24 cm.
System Control No.
(OCoLC)913164096
Summary
Kristin Conner Doughty examines how Rwandans navigated the combination of harmony and punishment in grassroots courts purportedly designed to rebuild the social fabric in the wake of the 1994 genocide. Postgenocide Rwandan officials developed new local courts ostensibly modeled on traditional practices of dispute resolution as part of a broader national policy of unity and reconciliation. The three legal forums at the heart of Remediation in Rwanda--genocide courts called inkiko gacaca, mediation committees called comite y'abunzi, and a legal aid clinic--all emphasized mediation based on principles of compromise and unity, brokered by third parties with the authority to administer punishment. Doughty demonstrates how exhortations to unity in legal forums served as a form of cultural control, even as people rebuilt moral community and conceived alternative futures through debates there.
Bibliography, etc. Note
Includes bibliographical references (pages 243-264) and index.
Available in Other Form
ebook version : 9780812292398
Record Appears in
Gift
Purchased from the income of the Soll Fund
Gift

The Arthur W. Diamond Law Library
Purchased from the income of the Soll Fund
Table of Contents
Introduction: Harmony Legal Models and the Architecture of Social Repair
1
ch. 1
Silencing the Past: Producing History and the Politics of Memory
40
ch. 2
Escaping Dichotomies: Grassroots Law in Historical and Global Context
74
ch. 3
Gacaca Days and Genocide Citizenship
96
ch. 4
Comite y'Abunzi: Politics and Poetics of the Ordinary
127
ch. 5
Legal Aid Clinic: Mediation as Thick Description
160
ch. 6
Improvising Authority: Lay Judges as Intermediaries
191
Conclusion: Legal Architectures of Social Repair
226
Notes
233
Bibliography
243
Index
265
Acknowledgments
281