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Journal ArticleDOI

The Survival of the Traditional Tswana Courts in the National Legal System of Botswana

Simon Roberts
- 01 Jan 1972 - 
- Vol. 16, Iss: 2, pp 103-129
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TLDR
In almost all the former British African territories the colonial power tried to make use of the traditional dispute settlement agencies which it found on arrival as mentioned in this paper. But the familiar legislative history yields little information about what has been happening on the ground.
Abstract
In almost all the former British African territories the colonial power tried to make use of the traditional dispute settlement agencies which it found on arrival. The history of these efforts is familiar, following a generally similar course in most territories. The arrangements made in the early years were haphazard; a good deal of formalization took place around 1930; more profound changes were initiated in the early 1960's and have continued since. But the familiar legislative history yields little information about what has been happening on the ground. We know very little of the way in which the traditional agencies drawn into the official system actually reacted towards this process of incorporation. Leaving aside what the statute may have said, have they remained the agencies to which Africans actually resorted for the settlement of their disputes? Has the type of business coming before them changed? Similarly we know little about those agencies, typically at the lower levels, which did not undergo incorporation. Have they continued to function, or have they simply died away?

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Citations
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A Typology of Relationships between State and Non-State Justice Systems

TL;DR: The literature on non-state justice in more than 20 states is surveyed in this paper to provide an analysis of the range of possible relationships between state and nonstate justice systems, and the circumstances in which they should be considered.
Journal ArticleDOI

Aspects of Democracy and Démocratisation in Zambia and Botswana: Exploring African Political Culture at the Grassroots

TL;DR: In this paper, the author carried out anthropological fieldwork among the Zambian Nkoya in 1972-1974 and in Francistown in 1988-1989, and in both cases has made repeated return visits since.
Journal ArticleDOI

Reconfiguring Law: An Ethnographic Perspective from Botswana

TL;DR: This article examined women's experiences in bringing legal claims regarding family property in Botswana and highlighted the ways women draw on diverse economic and social resources available to them through their differing positions within gendered social networks that shape daily life and affect the ability to access and manipulate a legal system.
References
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Book

African Political Systems

TL;DR: The Zulu of South Africa, Max Gluckman the political organization of the Ngwato of Bechuanaland protectorate, I. Schapera the political system of the Bemba tribe - north eastern Rhodesia, Audrey I. Richards the kingdom of the Ankole in Uganda, K. Oberg the Kede - a riverain state in northern Nigeria, S. Fortes the Nuer of the southern Sudan, E.F. Evans-Prichard.