Full Description
Justice at the Boundaries offers a powerful ethnographic account of the transformative potential and structural limitations of Taiwan's system of ad hoc Chambers of Indigenous Courts. Drawing on immersive fieldwork in courtrooms and Indigenous communities, J. Christopher Upton examines how judges, Indigenous litigants, and cultural brokers navigate contested terrains of law, identity, and sovereignty in a legal system shaped by ongoing processes of colonialism and aspirations of multiculturalism. From invocations of Indigenous laws to appeals to international human rights norms, the book reveals how courtroom encounters become sites of cultural negotiation, resistance, and possibility. Upton shows how Taiwan's Indigenous courts and other "boundary institutions" designed to bridge Indigenous and non-Indigenous worlds both challenge and reproduce entrenched hierarchies and power dynamics. The book brings fresh methodological and conceptual tools to the study of legal pluralism, Indigenous courts, Indigenous peoples' rights, and the complex politics of Indigenous recognition in the Asia-Pacific region and beyond.
Contents
Contents
List of Maps and Illustrations
Acknowledgments
Note to the Reader
Introduction: Of Courts and Ancestral Spirits
1 • Born of Wood, Born of Stone
2 • Orders in the Court
3 • Ethereal Presences of the Ad Hoc Chambers
4 • One Community, Two Controversies
5 • Hybrid Practices and Legal Indigeneities
6 • Boundary Institutions and Beyond
Glossary of Terms in English, Pinyin, and Chinese Characters
Notes
Bibliography
Index



