ANTH 342(F) Dispute and Conflict, Settlement and Resolution: The Anthropology of
Law
How does a society define the moral life and by what means does it resolve the internal
conflicts that inevitably arise? These questions are approached through a survey of the anthropology of law in the broad sense, as concerned not just with codified laws and formal
institutions, but with all forms of dispute settlement and conflict resolution, including mediation and arbitration. Taking an ethnographic and cross-cultural perspective, we will examine the cultural construction of dispute, the nature of evidence, and the variety of processes by which disputes can be resolved. We will further examine the relationship between
the scale of a community and its legal mechanisms, with particular attention to plural legal
systems and the tension between customary and national law in modernizing nations. Ultimately we will try to come to grips with the question of justice: its definition and the means
by which it may be achieved.
Format: seminar. Requirements: a midterm, a research paper, and class participation.
No prerequisites. Enrollment limit: 20 (expected: 15). Preference given to majors.
Hour: JUST