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Orientalism and legal education in the Middle East: reading Frederic Goadby's Introduction to the Study of Law1
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 02 January 2018
Abstract
Frederic Goadby's Introduction to the Study of Law, written for law students in British occupied Egypt and later Palestine, provides a significant record of colonial attitudes about Western law and the legal cultures encountered in the Middle East. Edward Said's Orientalism offers a deconstructive methodology which reveals the legal narrative of Goadby's work as offering an invitation to the students to become spectators, along with the colonists of their own legal culture. Once imbued with the spirit of English law, Egyptian and Palestinian students passed the test of civilisation. Goadby's book reminds us that while colonial occupation of territory may have ceased the impact of cultural occupations continue. For both coloniser and colonised this discourse becomes part of their legal inheritance, which creates much work for contemporary legal scholars.
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- Copyright © Society of Legal Scholars 2001
Footnotes
This essay is based on a paper given at the Middle East Studies Association Annual Meeting, Washington DC, November 1999. I would to thank Camille Mansour and Ghassan Faramant of the Birzeit University's Institute of Law for drawing my attention to Goadby's work. I would also like to thank Beverly Brown and the reviewers of this journal for the comments on earlier drafts.
References
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34. Ibid.
35. It was the revolt against the Khedive by the nationalist Ahmad Urabi that provided the pretext for British intervention in 1882.
36. Above n 32, p 11.
37. Ibid, p 15.
38. Ibid, p 16.
39. Ibid, p 17.
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42. Goadby, above n 12. pp v–vi.
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45. Ibid.
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48. He refers particularly to: Sir Henry Maine Ancient Law (London: John Murray, 1861) (ten editions were published by 1917); Sir Henry Maine Early English Institutions (London: John Murray, 1875).
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51. Shari'a is the Arabic term for Islamic law (‘the path’), whereas quanun means ‘law’ or ‘a law’ in the secular sense, such as norms which might result from legislation.
52. Goadby, above n 10, pp 21–22.
53. Maine's thesis that the legal moves from status to contract as ‘progressive societies’ develop has a resonance within colonial legal thinking.
54. Goadby, above n 10, pp 25–21.
55. Ibid, pp 30–31.
56. Austin argues that law is the command of the Sovereign and that the test of the command is that that it is an order backed by a threat: see Austin, J The Province of Jurisprudence Determined (London: Weidenfeld and Nicholson, 1954).Google Scholar
57. Goadby, above n 10, pp 38–39.
58. Ibid, p 39.
59. Ibid, p 42.
60. Ibid, p 51
61. This mission is well recorded in Berriedale Keith, A The Constitution, Administration und the Laws of Empire (London: Collins, 1924)Google Scholar; the references to Palestine appear at pp 301–304. The work is part of a 12-volume series edited by Hugh Gunn under the title The British Empire—an attempt at a comprehensive look at the project.
62. Sir Holdworth, W S ‘Foreword’ in Levy-Ullmann, H The English Legal Tradition: Its Sources und History (trans Mitchell, M; revised and edited Goadby, F M) (London: Macmillan, 1935) p v.Google Scholar
63. I have attempted to argue that it might to be possible not so much to recover as to reconstruct legal cultures in these circumstances: see Strawson, J ‘Palestine's Basic Law: Constituting New Identities Through Liberating Legal Culture’ (1998) 20 Loyola of Los Angeles International and Comparative LJ 411–432.Google Scholar
64. For information on the Birzeit Institute of Law including the Masters course, see http://www.birzeit.edu/law (last visited 15 January 2001).
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