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In der gegenwärtigen Forschung zu Recht und Kolonialismus zeigt sich ein interessanter Gegensatz: Während das Recht vor allem als ein Instrument kolonialer Machtausübung verstanden wird, erscheinen Juristen, die nach einer Ausbildung an europäischen oder amerikanischen Universitäten in ihre Herkunftsländer zurückkehrten, als zentrale Akteure lokaler Unabhängigkeitsbewegungen, aus denen heraus neue Nationalstaaten entstanden. Dieser Gegensatz wird beispielhaft illustriert durch aktuelle Arbeiten von Turan Kayaoglu zum Legal Imperialism sowie Arnulf Becker-Lorca und seine Figur des Semi-Peripheral Jurist. Das Buch Asian Legal Revivals – Lawyers in the Shadow of Empire erschien 2010 und geht daher nicht direkt auf diese Arbeiten ein, dennoch ist es ein Beitrag dazu, beide Beobachtungen miteinander zu verbinden. Die Rechtssoziologen Yves Dezalay und Bryant G. Garth, die gemeinsam bereits sechs Bücher verfasst oder herausgegeben haben, untersuchen die Rolle von Juristen in der Herausbildung und Legitimation politischer Herrschaft in sieben asiatischen Ländern im 19. und 20. Jahrhundert. ...
The study of civilization is one of the core subjects of international legal history. This is no recent development. Jörg Fisch published his seminal work "Die Europäische Expansion und das Völkerrecht" in 1984, the same year in which Gerrit W. Gong presented his renowned "Standard of Civilization". Today, the more recent works by Martti Koskenniemi and Antony Anghie probably represent the most influential research in this field. What all these path breaking works have in common is that they discuss concepts of civilization in international law especially with regard to its function as providing justification narratives for the European/non-European unequal relations, in particular in the 19th century. ...
Ethical issues of justice and human rights are central to countries emerging from conflict. Yet involving women in transitional justice processes rarely is articulated in ethical terms. To make a case for an ethical commitment to improving women’s participation in these processes, the paper begins by exploring why transitional justice strategies should bother with gender. Women and men often experience conflict and injustices differently which may require different responses to redress harms suffered. Timor-Leste is used as a case study. The paper explores whether hybrid traditional and formal justice systems can address women’s justice claims in principle and specifically, when applied to Timor-Leste. The paper maintains that customary justice practices can be combined with conventional ones, but only when both practices adhere to international human rights conventions, which rarely happens where patriarchal practices are entrenched. The conclusion addresses what might be done to create gender-responsive justice systems given that they are crucial in building environments that are conducive to sustainable peace and security.