AN226      
Political and Legal Anthropology

This information is for the 2009/10 session.

Teachers responsible

Dr Mathijs Pelkmans, A614 and Dr Fauzia Sharif

Availability

This course is compulsory for BA/BSc Social Anthropology and BA Anthropology and Law students. It is optional for LLB and LLF students.

Pre-requisites

Undergraduates taking this course should have completed an introductory course in anthropology unless granted exemption by the course teacher.

Course content

The anthropological analysis of political and legal institutions as revealed in relevant theoretical debates and with reference to selected ethnography. The development of political and legal anthropology and their key concepts including forms of authority; forms of knowledge and power; political competition and conflict; indigenous responses to colonialism; comparative legal ethnography; folk concepts of justice; development and critiques of legal pluralism; legal accommodation ion Europe; forum shopping.

Teaching

Lectures AN226 weekly MT, LT. Classes AN226.A weekly MT, LT.

Formative coursework

Students are expected to prepare discussion material for presentation in the classes. They will be given a course work mark on the basis of the presentations and written work based upon the presentations.

Indicative reading

Gledhill, J 1994 Power and its Disguises; Leach, E 1954 The Political Systems of Highland Burma; Sharma, A and Gupta, A 2006 The Anthropology of the State; Verdery, K 1999  The Political Lives of Dead Bodies; Moore, S F 1978 Law as Process; Malinowski, B 1916 Crime and Custom in Savage Society; Bohannan, P 1957 Justice and Judgement among the Tiv; Comaroff J & S Roberts, 1981 Rules and Processes. Detailed reading lists are provided at the beginning of the course.

Assessment

A three-hour examination in the ST worth 80%. Students must give two oral presentations (one each term), the best of these two presentations will count for 5% of the overall mark for the course. Students who do not give two presentations will receive a mark of 0 (incomplete).  In addition, students submit two written pieces based on their presentations of no more than 1000 words each: one in MT (7.5%) and one in LT (7.5%). These are not full essays, only write-ups of the presentations given and may be in bullet form.

^