State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana

In documented incidents alone, between January 2006 and December 2009, 900 people were killed in 534 incidents of group conflict in Turkana. On the basis of this apparent lawlessness, the central research question queries whether the apparent inability of the state law and its institutions to manage...

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Main Author: Baraza, Masha
Format: Thesis
Language:unknown
Published: 2014
Subjects:
Online Access:http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/62108/
http://webcat.warwick.ac.uk/record=b2730726~S1
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spelling ftuwarwick:oai:wrap.warwick.ac.uk:62108 2023-05-15T13:57:11+02:00 State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana Baraza, Masha 2014-04 http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/62108/ http://webcat.warwick.ac.uk/record=b2730726~S1 unknown Baraza, Masha (2014) State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana. PhD thesis, University of Warwick. KN Asia and Eurasia Africa Pacific Area and Antarctica Thesis or Dissertation NonPeerReviewed 2014 ftuwarwick 2022-03-16T20:53:08Z In documented incidents alone, between January 2006 and December 2009, 900 people were killed in 534 incidents of group conflict in Turkana. On the basis of this apparent lawlessness, the central research question queries whether the apparent inability of the state law and its institutions to manage group conflicts in Turkana districts denotes a crisis of application or a crisis of substance. Is the problem merely the extension of structures of state law such as courts, prosecutors, security agents, prisons and advocates to Turkana or does the crisis speak to a more fundamental challenge. The research argues the latter, that the relationship between state law and group conflicts in Turkana demands an interrogation of the conceptual and institutional dimensions of modern state law. The thesis interrogates how state law is incorporated; an apparatus of power through which certain regulative rationalities come to reframe the terrain upon which people in Turkana live and define their lives. In order to move state law in a radically improving direction, the research argues for a reorientation of rationalities and legality. The reorientation is advanced through two corresponding techniques that allude to the structural and perspectival elements of state law. Fashioned from amongst the unfinished representations of modernity and the initial task of conceiving a (post)colonial tension between regulation and emancipation, the first task involves building on those progressive aspects of state law that enhance its political legitimacy. The second requires the adoption of a transgressive mode of thinking described as 'knowledge-as-emancipation'. On the basis of these two prescriptions, state law can develop a more purposeful and emancipatory purpose within the conflict context of Turkana in particular, and Kenya in general. Thesis Antarc* Antarctica The University of Warwick: WRAP - Warwick Research Archive Portal Pacific
institution Open Polar
collection The University of Warwick: WRAP - Warwick Research Archive Portal
op_collection_id ftuwarwick
language unknown
topic KN Asia and Eurasia
Africa
Pacific Area
and Antarctica
spellingShingle KN Asia and Eurasia
Africa
Pacific Area
and Antarctica
Baraza, Masha
State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana
topic_facet KN Asia and Eurasia
Africa
Pacific Area
and Antarctica
description In documented incidents alone, between January 2006 and December 2009, 900 people were killed in 534 incidents of group conflict in Turkana. On the basis of this apparent lawlessness, the central research question queries whether the apparent inability of the state law and its institutions to manage group conflicts in Turkana districts denotes a crisis of application or a crisis of substance. Is the problem merely the extension of structures of state law such as courts, prosecutors, security agents, prisons and advocates to Turkana or does the crisis speak to a more fundamental challenge. The research argues the latter, that the relationship between state law and group conflicts in Turkana demands an interrogation of the conceptual and institutional dimensions of modern state law. The thesis interrogates how state law is incorporated; an apparatus of power through which certain regulative rationalities come to reframe the terrain upon which people in Turkana live and define their lives. In order to move state law in a radically improving direction, the research argues for a reorientation of rationalities and legality. The reorientation is advanced through two corresponding techniques that allude to the structural and perspectival elements of state law. Fashioned from amongst the unfinished representations of modernity and the initial task of conceiving a (post)colonial tension between regulation and emancipation, the first task involves building on those progressive aspects of state law that enhance its political legitimacy. The second requires the adoption of a transgressive mode of thinking described as 'knowledge-as-emancipation'. On the basis of these two prescriptions, state law can develop a more purposeful and emancipatory purpose within the conflict context of Turkana in particular, and Kenya in general.
format Thesis
author Baraza, Masha
author_facet Baraza, Masha
author_sort Baraza, Masha
title State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana
title_short State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana
title_full State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana
title_fullStr State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana
title_full_unstemmed State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana
title_sort state law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in turkana
publishDate 2014
url http://wrap.warwick.ac.uk/62108/
http://webcat.warwick.ac.uk/record=b2730726~S1
geographic Pacific
geographic_facet Pacific
genre Antarc*
Antarctica
genre_facet Antarc*
Antarctica
op_relation Baraza, Masha (2014) State law and the (post)colony : a critical analysis through group conflicts in Turkana. PhD thesis, University of Warwick.
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