Postcolonial Legality: Law, Power and Politics in Zambia

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Postcolonial Legality: Law, Power and Politics in Zambia

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  • 製本 Paperback:紙装版/ペーパーバック版/ページ数 324 p.
  • 言語 ENG
  • 商品コード 9781032288307
  • DDC分類 342.6894

Full Description

This book interrogates the ideology and practices of liberal constitutionalism in the Zambian postcolony. The analysis focuses on the residual political and governmental effects of an imperial form of power, embodied in the person of the republican president, termed here prerogativism. Through systematic, long-term ethnographic engagement with Zambian constitutionalist activists - lawyers, judges and civic leaders - the study examines how prerogativism has shaped the postcolonial political landscape and limited the possibilities of constitutional liberalism. This is revealed in the ways that repeated efforts to reform the constitution have sidelined popular participation and thus failed to address the deep divide between a small elite stratum (from which the constitutional activists are drawn) and the marginalized masses of the population. Along the way, the study documents the intimate interpenetration of political and legal action and examines how prerogativism delimits the political engagements of elite actors. Special attention is given to the reluctance of legal activists to engage with popular politics and to the conservative ethos that undermines efforts to pursue a jurisprudence of transformational constitutionalism in the findings of the Constitutional Court. The work contributes to the rising interest in applying socio-legal analysis to the statutory domain in postcolonial jurisdictions. It offers a pioneering attempt to deconstruct the amorphous and ambivalent assemblage of ideas and practices related to constitutionalism through detailed ethnographic interrogation. It will appeal to scholars, students and practitioners with an interest in theorizing challenges to political liberalism in postcolonial contexts, as well as in rethinking the methodological toolbox of socio-legal analysis.

Contents

Foreword

I

Preliminary issues

1 Problems and paradoxes

Problems

Sources and resources

Paradoxes

Politico-legal paradoxes

Paradoxes of liberalism

Presidential paradoxes

Paradoxes of constitutionalism

2 Unthinking the postcolonial state

Imperial liberalism and postcolonial illiberalism

Constituting (post)colonial government

Misreading liberal power

The neopatrimonial stain

Exception as an art of government

A prerogativist form of power

Prerogativism and the politico-legal domain

The paradoxical demos

Constituent vs constituted power

The elusive exception

3 Constitutionalism as an ethnographic object

The Zambian context

Ethnographic encounters

A makeshift toolkit

Domains of legal knowledge

Doctrinal legality

Socio-legal alternatives

Custom vs law

The ends of law

4 Between the decision and the demos: Activist lawyers and constituent power

Perspectives on postcolonial constitutionalism

The time and place for legal expertise

Ethics and legal expertise

The prerogativist perspective

The will of the people

On 'going to the people'

Reflections

Legal activism and constitutionalism

The paradox of non-partisan politics

II

A genealogy of postcolonial power

5 Imperial constitutionalism 1924-1996

Introduction

From Northern Rhodesia to Zambia's First Republic

Independence constitution

One-party constitution

Constitutional deadlock

Reactions to the 1996 constitution

Popular constitutional politics

6 The Oasis Forum and the emergence of liberal constitutionalism

Chiluba loses his grip

Lawyers step up

The legalization of the Oasis Forum

The Mwanawasa years and beyond

The 2016 Amendment Act

Constitutional closure: The death of Bill 10

III

Law, politics and unfettered power

Excursus: Redescribing postcolonial power

Colonial emergency and postcolonial jurisprudence

The president's two bodies

The monarch's colonial regent

A profile of imperial power

Adventures of prerogativism in space/time

7 'Lawfully illegal'

Part I: A tale of two trials

The specter of presidentialism

The spoils of security

Act 1: Deposing the DPP

Politics of governance

Act 2: Trials of a president

The matrix of plunder

One crime, two verdicts

Part II: The paradoxical sovereignty of the postcolony

Innocence and guilt

The case for executive interference

The president's (not quite) two bodies revisited

8 In the shadows of prerogativism

Managing the migration of power

A slippery baton

A tale of two tribunals

Disciplining the Patriotic Front

Legalism vs political contingency

Dora Siliya's electoral blues

In the name of exception: The Kabimba Tribunal

Wynter Kabimba's stationary collision

The contours of postcolonial legality

9 The allure of postcolonial legality

Principled pragmatism revisited

A time to sow: The seeds of prerogativism

Nolle controversies

Unfettered discretion?

A time to reap

Liberal absurdities

Progress vs purpose

IV

A new hope?

10 Decolonizing the republic

A constituent presidency?

Another missed opportunity

A transformative jurisprudence?

Professor Munalula dissents

Law's purposes

The power of principles

A postliberal legality?

Postliberal trajectories

11 Coda

The limits of liberal legality

A constituent politics of refounding?

The incrementalist option

The case for a progressive postliberalism

In closing

Annexes

Source materials

Index

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