Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-25T06:22:24.384Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Judicial Systems of Sub-Saharan Africa: An Analysis of Neglect

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  23 May 2014

Extract

Judicial research from a cross-national perspective has been a relatively neglected subject among American scholars. Since the founding of Law and Society Review, approximately twenty-two articles have appeared on comparative judicial topics, with one issue (summer 1978) devoted exclusively to a European sociology of law. Of these articles, five address African problems. In fifteen years of International and Comparative Law Quarterly, only seven articles treat the African judiciary. A perusal of the British Journal of Law and Society reveals a similar neglect of the cross-national perspective. More revealing, in two of the respected comparative politics journals, Comparative Politics and Comparative Political Studies, only 0.3 percent of the total number of articles published between 1968 and 1981 dealt with judicial systems. Out of twenty-nine subject headings, courts and constitutions finished in a tie for last place-only 7.1 percent of all articles (Sigelman and Gadbois, 1983: 293-94).

Unfortunately, the journals specializing in African affairs offer us no more enlightenment about judicial systems on that continent. While the prestigious Journal of Modern African Studies has published approximately ten articles on judicial issues, the other journals have been decidedly remiss. Two specialized journals are devoted to the topic: Journal of African Law and African Law Studies. Competent articles have been published in these outlets but, due to their general inaccessability, they have failed to become part of the research knowledge on African political systems.

Why has there been a relative neglect of cross-national studies of the African judiciary? This article first provides explanations for why these institutions have not enjoyed scholarly visibility.

Type
Focus On
Copyright
Copyright © African Studies Association 1988

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

BIBLIOGRAPHY

Amin, Samir. 1973. Neo-Colonialism in West Africa. New York: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
Bennett, T.W. 1981. “Conflict of Laws--The Application of Customary Law and the Common Law in Zimbabwe.” International and Comparative Law Quarterly 30: 59103.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brown, Lionel and Garner, John F. 1967. French Administrative Law. Great Britain: Butterworth.Google Scholar
Bryde, Brun-Otto. 1976. The Politics and Sociology of African Legal Development. Frankfurt an Main: Alfred Metzner Metzner Verlag Gmblt.Google Scholar
Canter, Richard S. 1978. “Dispute Settlement and Dispute Processing in Zambia: Individual Choice Versus Societal Constraints.” in Nader, Laura and Todd, Harry F. Jr. (eds.) The Disputing Process--Law in Ten Societies. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Carter, Helen Marshall. 1973. “Political Justice: The African Experience. Studies in Nigeria, Uganda, and Zambia.” Ph.D. Dissertation. University of Wisconsin, Madison.Google Scholar
Chayes, Abram. 1974. The Cuban Missile Crisis. International Crises and the Role of Law. New York: Oxford University Press.Google Scholar
Crowder, Michael. 1987. “Whose Dream Was It Anyway? Twenty-Five Years of African Independence,” African Affairs 86/342: 2546.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dankwa, E.V.O. and Flinterman, C. 1977. “Judicial Review in Ghana.” University of Ghana Law Journal 14/1:5.Google Scholar
Friedman, Lawrence M. 1979. Law and Social Change in Mediterranean Europe and Latin America: A Handbook for Comparative Study. Oceana.Google Scholar
Galanter, Marc. 1984. Competing Equalities: Law and the Backward Classes in India. Berkeley: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Ghai, Y.P. 1972. “Constitutions and the Political Order in East Africa.” The International and Comparative Law Quarterly 21: 403–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ghai, Yash P. 1976. “Notes Toward a Theory of Law and Ideology: Tanzanian Perspectives.” African Law Studies 13: 31105.Google Scholar
Howard, Rhoda E. 1986. Human Rights in Commonwealth Africa. Totowa, NJ: Rowman and Littlefield.Google Scholar
Isaacman, Allen and Isaacman, Barbara. 1981. “Creating a New Legal System.” Africa Report 26/1: 1922.Google Scholar
Jackson, Robert H. and Rosberg, Carl G. 1982. “Why Africa's Weak States Persist: The Empirical and the Juridical in Statehood.” World Politics 35/1:124.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jackson, Robert H. and Rosberg, Carl G. 1986. “Sovereignty and Underdevelopment: Juridical Statehood in the African Crisis.” Journal of Modern African Studies 24/ 1: 131.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Jacomy-Millette, Annemarie. 1974. “Is the Institution of the Ombudsman Applicable to Africa? Legislation and First Results.” Canadian Journal of African Studies 8/1: 145–54.Google Scholar
James, R.W. 1973. “Implementing the Arusha Declaration: The Role of the Legal System.” The African Review. A Journal of African Politics, Development, and International Affairs 3/2: 182–83.Google Scholar
Keuning, J. 1971. “Some Remarks on Law and Courts in Africa.” in Allott, A.N. and Cotran, E. (eds.) Integration of Customary and Modern Legal Systems in Africa. New York: Africana Publishing.Google Scholar
Lowry, Michael J. 1978. “A Good Name is Worth More Than Money: Strategies of Court Use in Urban Ghana,” in Nader, Laura and Todd, Harry F. Jr. (eds.) The Disputing Process--Law in Ten Societies. New York: Columbia University Press.Google Scholar
Martin, Robert. 1977. “The Ombudsman in Zambia.” The Journal of Modern African Studies 15/2: 239–59.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McAuslan, J.P.W.B. 1970. “The Evolution of Public Law in East Africa in the 1960s Part I.” Public Law 5-19; Part II, 153–74.Google Scholar
McGowan, Patrick and Smith, Dale L. 1978. “Economic Dependency in Black Africa: An Analysis of Competing Theories.” International Organization 32 (1): 179235.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Merryman, John H., Clark, David S., and Friedman, Lawrence M. 1979. Law and Social Change in Mediterranean Europe and Latin America: A Handbook for Comparative Study. Oceana.Google Scholar
Nicholson, M.E.R. 1973. “Change Without Conflict: A Case Study of Legal Change in Tanzania.” Law and Society Review 7/4 :747–66.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Norton, Patrick M. 1973. “The Tanzanian Ombudsman.” International and Comparative Law Quarterly 22: 603–31.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nwabueze, B.O. 1977. Judicialism in Commonwealth Africa: The Role of the Courts in Government. London: C. Hurst and Company.Google Scholar
Nwogugu, E.I. 1976. “Abolution of Customary Courts--The Nigerian Experiment.” Journal of African Law 20/1:119.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Odenyo, Amos O. 1973. “Conquest, Clientage, and Land Law Among the Luo of Kenya.” Law and Society Review 7/4 :767–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paul, James C.N. 1974. “Some Observations on Constitutionalism, Judicial Review, and the Rule of Law in Africa.” Ohio State Law Journal 35/4:851–69.Google Scholar
Paul, James and Clapham, Christopher. 1971. Ethiopian Constitutional Development. Vol. II. Addis Ababa: Haile Sellassie I University.Google Scholar
Pfeiffer, Steven B. 1978. “Notes on the Role of the Judiciary in the Constitutional Systems of East Africa Since Independence.” Case Western Reserve Journal of International Law 10/1: 1154.Google Scholar
Poulter, Sebastian. 1972. “The Place of the Laws of Lesotholi in the Legal System of Lesotho.” African Affairs 71/283:144–62.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Scotton, J.F. 1970. “Judicial Independence and Political Expression in East Africa-Two Colonial Legacies.” East African Law Journal 6:119.Google Scholar
Seidman, Robert B. 1974. “Judicial Review and Fundamental Freedom in Anglophonic Independent Africa.” Ohio State Law Journal 35:828.Google Scholar
Seidman, Robert B. 1978. The State, Law and Development. New York: St. Martin's Press.Google Scholar
Seidman, Robert B. 1982. “How a Bill Becomes a Law in Zimbabwe: On the Problem of Transforming the Colonial State.” Africa 52/3: 5676.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Seidman, Robert B. 1983. “Rules of Recognition in the Primary Courts of Zimbabwe: On Lawyers' Reasoning and Customary Law.” International and Comparative Law Quarterly 32:871903.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Shack, William A. 1976. “Guilt and Innocence: Oathing, Evidence, and the Judicial Process Among the Gurage.” Journal of African Studies 3/3:297310.Google Scholar
Sigelman, Lee and Gadbois, George Jr. 1983. “Contemporary Comparative Politics: An Inventory and Assessment.” Comparative Political Studies 16/3:275305.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snyder, Francis G. 1980. “Law and Development in the Light of Dependency Theory.” Law and Society Review 14/3:758–60.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Trubek, David M. and Galanter, Marc. 1974. “Scholars in Self-Estrangement: Some Reflections on the Crisis in Law and Development Studies in the United States.” Wisconsin Law Review 13/4: 1071–72.Google Scholar
Vengroff, Richard. 1975. “Neo-Colonialism and Policy Outputs in Africa.” Comparative Political Studies 8: 234–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Verhelst, Thierry. 1968. “Safeguarding African Customary Law: Judicial and Legislative Processes for Its Adaptation and Integration.” Occasional Paper No. 7, African Studies Center, UCLA.Google Scholar
Weilee, Joseph. 1982. “Community, Member States and European Integration: Is the Law Relevant?Journal of Common Market Studies 21/1, 2: 3956.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Welch, Claude E. Jr. and Meltzer, Ronald I. 1984. Human Rights and Development in Africa. Albany: State University Press of New York, Buffalo.Google Scholar