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  • Cited by 91
Publisher:
Cambridge University Press
Online publication date:
June 2013
Print publication year:
2013
Online ISBN:
9781139199247

Book description

How do a legal order and the rule of law develop in a war-torn state? Using his field research in Sudan, the author uncovers how colonial administrators, postcolonial governments and international aid agencies have used legal tools and resources to promote stability and their own visions of the rule of law amid political violence and war in Sudan. Tracing the dramatic development of three forms of legal politics - colonial, authoritarian and humanitarian - this book contributes to a growing body of scholarship on law in authoritarian regimes and on human rights and legal empowerment programs in the Global South. Refuting the conventional wisdom of a legal vacuum in failed states, this book reveals how law matters deeply even in the most extreme cases of states still fighting for political stability.

Awards

Winner of the 2014 Herbert Jacob Book Award, Law and Society Association

Honourable Mention, 2014 C. Herman Pritchett Award, Law and Courts Section, American Political Science Association

Reviews

'A remarkable piece of socio-legal scholarship [made] into an incredibly readable story.'

Source: Law and Society Association award citation

'Challenges our assumptions about the notion that law promotes democracy and human rights … [an] insightful study.'

Source: American Political Science Association award citation

‘An important and original contribution … groundbreaking … overdue and much needed.’

Lutz Oette Source: Journal of African Law

‘Insightful, sober, and forward-looking analysis of the practice of human rights in the harsh realities of violent conflict and moral ambivalence.’

Abdullahi An-Na'im - Charles Howard Candler Professor of Law, Emory University

‘A meticulous examination of the multiple roles, uses, and users of law in and by all of Sudan's several successive 'fragile states' … This is a bracing and important book, humane and wise, in domains where neither humanity nor wisdom has been conspicuous.’

Martin Krygier - Gordon Samuels Professor of Law and Social Theory, University of New South Wales

‘Ambitious, passionate, and eminently readable - Law's Fragile State challenges the presumption that law is all but absent in war-torn contexts like that of Sudan … [it] pushes the boundaries of law and society scholarship on several fronts at once.’

Tamir Moustafa - author of The Struggle for Constitutional Power: Law, Politics, and Economic Development in Egypt

'Well-researched … well-written [and] thought-provoking … Highly recommended.'

Source: Choice

'Beautifully illustrates how law served political ends over 114 years of Sudanese history … a personal and a professional journey [and] an outstanding contribution to a global literature.'

Rachel E. Stern Source: Law and Politics Book Review

'Law’s Fragile State invites us to interrogate exactly what we mean by the rule of law and what we expect it to accomplish.'

Sally Engle Merry Source: Law and Social Inquiry

'A rich interdisciplinary analysis grounded in extensive fieldwork … a compelling story.'

Rachel Ellett Source: Law and Social Inquiry

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Contents

Bibliography

Sudan Archive, Durham University

Annual Report of the Finances, Administration and Condition of the Sudan, 1902–1952 [including Annual Report of the Legal Secretary to the Sudan Government, 1902–1952].
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Confidential Memorandum of the Office of the Legal Secretary, “Is It Desirable that the Sudan Government Should Introduce Legislation to Define the Persons to Whom the Term Sudanese Should Be Applied?” Robertson Collection, Sudan Archive, Durham University, 517/12/7.
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Ridley, John. 1969. Opinion. Daily Telegraph, May 27, 1969. K. D. D. Henderson Collection, Sudan Archive, Durham University 539/7/20.
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Robertson, James W. 1952. “Speech on Recent Constitutional Developments in Sudan,” March 4, 1952. Robertson Collection, Sudan Archive, Durham University, 529/13/17–43.
Robertson, James W. Undated. “Letter to Mohammed Eff. Osman Yasin (Semi-official correspondence),” Robertson Collection, Sudan Archive, Durham University, 528/3/18–28
Robertson, James W. Undated. “Note to Marjory Perham, Times Newspaper.” Sudan Archive, Durham University, 528/3/41.

“SECRET: Development of Ministerial Responsibility among Sudanese Members of Councils,” Office of the Civil Secretary, Sudan Government. Robertson Collection, Sudan Archive, Durham University 518/13/1.

Sumner, Geoffrey. 1969. “Tomb is Key to Sudan,” Sunday Times, June 1st, 1969. K. D. D. Henderson Collection, Sudan Archive, Durham University 539/7/26.

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Wingate, F. R. 1910. “Letter from Wingate to Asser, Acting Sirdar and Governor-General in Cairo, 26 September 1910.” F. R. Wingate Collection, Sudan Archive, Durham University, 297/3/161.

Cases

All are reported in Sudan Law Journal and Reports.
Dairat El Mahdi v. Abdel Gadir Abu Regeila, S.L.J.R. (The Sudan Law Journal and Reports) (1960) at 49.
Ali Abu Sam v. Kambal Osman, S.L.J.R. (1962) at 207.
Maeema Hassan v. Mursi Hassan, S.L.J.R. (1962) at 86.
Fatma Ibrahim v. The Attorney General, S.L.J.R. (1958) at 3.
Khartoum Municipal Council v. Michel Cotran, S.L.J.R. (1958) at 85.
Furmeister and Co. v. Abdel Ghani Ali Mousa, S.L.J.R. (1959) at 38.
Heirs of Naeema Ahmed Wagealla v. El Hag Ahmed Mohammed, S.L.J.R. (1961).
John Fairweather v. Gabriel Gabrielides, S.L.J.R. (1963) at 212.
Mohammed Adlan v. Sudan Government, Awad El Sid Abdullah and others, S.L.J.R. (1956) at 64.
Building Authority of Khartoum v. Evangellos Evangelledes. S.L.J.R. (1958) at 44.
Asma Mahmoud Mohamed Taha and Abdel Latif Amr Hisballah vs. the Sudan Government, S.L.J.R. (1986).

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