Anthropology of Law
by Fernanda Pirie (Author
Questions about the
nature of law, its relationship with custom, and the distinctive form of legal
rules, categories, and reasoning, are placed at the centre of this introduction
to the anthropology of law. It brings empirical scholarship within the scope of
legal philosophy, while suggesting new avenues of inquiry for the
anthropologist.
Going beyond the
functional and instrumental aspects of law that underlie traditional
ethnographic studies of order and conflict resolution, The Anthropology of Law
considers contemporary debates on human rights and new forms of property, but
also delves into the rich corpus of texts and codes studied by legal
historians, classicists, and orientalist scholars. Studies of the great legal
systems of ancient China, India, and the Islamic world, unjustly neglected by
anthropologists, are examined alongside forms of law created on their
peripheries. The coutumes of medieval Europe, the codes drawn up by tribal
groups in Tibet and the Yemen, village laws on both sides of the Mediterranean,
and the intricate codes of saga in Iceland provide rich empirical detail for
the author's analysis of the cross-cultural importance of the form of law, as
text or rule, and the relative marginality of its functions as an instrument of
government or foundation of social order. Carefully-selected examples shed new
light upon the interrelations and distinctions between law, custom, and
justice. Gradually an argument unfolds concerning the tensions between
legalistic thought and argument, and the ideological or aspirational claims to
embody justice, morality, and religious truth which lie at the heart of what we
think of as law.