否认的建筑:1952–1960年毛起义期间的帝国暴力、法律建构和历史知识

IF 0.2 Q4 LAW
J. Appiah, Roland Mireku Yeboah, Akosua Asah-Asante
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引用次数: 0

摘要

2013年,英国政府解决了一起集体诉讼,指控英国殖民地政府在1952年至1960年的“肯尼亚紧急状态”期间对肯尼亚人进行了拘留、虐待和酷刑。在审判过程中,检方的三位历史专家证人Caroline Elkins、David Anderson和Huw Bennett的努力,发现了36个前英国殖民地的8000多份历史档案。这些文件中所载的材料表明,英国不仅意识到在紧急状态期间肯尼亚各地普遍发生的侵犯人权行为,而且事实上,殖民政府的最高级别也认可并系统地规范了这种暴力的使用。本文借鉴福柯将历史档案视为“话语系统”的概念,并利用三位专家的证词,探讨了英国殖民地政府如何能够主导围绕肯尼亚法律和茂身份的话语空间,使其能够为在整个紧急状态期间实施系统性暴力辩护,并在当时以及之后的几十年里逃避对这些虐待行为的法律责任。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Architecture of Denial: Imperial Violence, the Construction of Law and Historical Knowledge during the Mau Mau Uprising, 1952–1960
In 2013, the UK government settled a class action suit, which alleged that the British Colonial Government had subjected Kenyans to detainment, ill treatment and torture during the 1952–1960 ‘Kenya Emergency’. During the trial proceedings, the efforts of three expert historical witnesses for the prosecution – Caroline Elkins, David Anderson and Huw Bennett – led to the discovery of a cache of over 8,000 historical files from 36 former British colonies. The material contained within these documents suggested not only that Britain was aware of pervasive human rights abuses occurring throughout Kenya during the Emergency, but that the use of such violence was in fact endorsed and systematically regulated at the highest levels of the colonial administration. Drawing on Foucault’s conception of historical archives as ‘systems of discursivity’, and making use of the testimonies of the three experts, this article explores how the British Colonial Administration was able to dominate the discursive space surrounding Kenyan law and Mau Mau identity, allowing it both to justify the implementation of systemic violence throughout the Emergency, and to evade legal responsibility for these abuses at the time, and for decades afterward.
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来源期刊
CiteScore
0.30
自引率
0.00%
发文量
18
期刊介绍: The African Journal of Legal Studies (AJLS) is a peer-reviewed and interdisciplinary academic journal focusing on human rights and rule of law issues in Africa as analyzed by lawyers, economists, political scientists and others drawn from throughout the continent and the world. The journal, which was established by the Africa Law Institute and is now co-published in collaboration with Brill | Nijhoff, aims to serve as the leading forum for the thoughtful and scholarly engagement of a broad range of complex issues at the intersection of law, public policy and social change in Africa. AJLS places emphasis on presenting a diversity of perspectives on fundamental, long-term, systemic problems of human rights and governance, as well as emerging issues, and possible solutions to them. Towards this end, AJLS encourages critical reflections that are based on empirical observations and experience as well as theoretical and multi-disciplinary approaches.
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