State Law, Dispute Processing And Legal Pluralism : Unspoken Dialogues From Rural India / Kalindi Kokal.
By: Kokal, Kalindi [author.].
Publisher: New York : Routledge, 2019Description: 200p. 12 illustrations.ISBN: 9780367726829.Subject(s): Rural conditions | India | Customary law | Dispute resolution (Law) | Legal polycentricityDDC classification: 342.54042 Summary: This book presents an ethnography of dispute processing by non-state forums and actors in rural India. As such it sheds light on a much neglected and contested topic. Arising in the context of recent legal and political debates that question the legitimacy of non-state actors engaged in dispute processing, the book explores the nature, form, and functioning of such forums and actors in two locations in rural India. Focusing on a fishermen’s community belonging to the caste of Hindu Machimār Koḷīs in coastal Maharashtra and an agrarian community in Uttarakhand with members from the Pandit, Thakur, Bhotiā, and Harijan caste groups, this study shows the manner in which non-state forums and actors engage with state law and its regulatory systems.Item type | Current location | Call number | Status | Date due | Barcode |
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Books | NASSDOC Library | 342.54042 KOK-S (Browse shelf) | Available | 53565 |
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342.54 SIN-S Sixteen stormy days : | 342.54 SRI-; Impact of partition on constitution-making in India | 342.54029 CHA-C Constitutional Democracy in India | 342.54042 KOK-S State Law, Dispute Processing And Legal Pluralism : | 342.54066 GUP-; Ombudsman: an Indian perspective | 342.54066 GUP-; Ombudsman: an Indian perspective | 342.54083 ROY-C Citizenship In India |
Includes bibliographical references and index.
This book presents an ethnography of dispute processing by non-state forums and actors in rural India. As such it sheds light on a much neglected and contested topic. Arising in the context of recent legal and political debates that question the legitimacy of non-state actors engaged in dispute processing, the book explores the nature, form, and functioning of such forums and actors in two locations in rural India. Focusing on a fishermen’s community belonging to the caste of Hindu Machimār Koḷīs in coastal Maharashtra and an agrarian community in Uttarakhand with members from the Pandit, Thakur, Bhotiā, and Harijan caste groups, this study shows the manner in which non-state forums and actors engage with state law and its regulatory systems.
English.
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