Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-dsjbd Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-12-04T09:29:26.072Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Fighting over property: the articulation of dominant and subordinate legal systems governing the inheritance of immovable property among Blacks in Zimbabwe

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  07 December 2011

Extract

Law, particularly the law of property, may indeed be an instrument of the ruling class for the reproduction of any given social and economic formation, but few anthropologists have pursued this line of argument. Instead of examining how law was actually generated within particular political and economic contexts, anthropologists concerned with property law in colonial Africa tended to take for granted its existence at a particular point in time, and either to emphasise the institutional duality of colonial and indigenous assumptions and procedures concerning property or to stress the universal elements of legal behaviour despite these institutional differences.

Résumé

Lutte pour la propriété: l'articulation des systèmes légaux dominants et subordonnés gouvernant l'héritage de biens immobiliers parmi les Noirs au Zimbabwe

Cet article examine certaines des pratiques selon lesquelles les lois coutumières et statutaires sur l'héritage étaient manipulées par les administrateurs de la Rhodésie du Sud qui cherchaient à réduire la propriété foncière libre parmi les Noirs. La relation de la loi coutumière (souvent créée de nouveau par ces administrateurs) par rapport à la loi statutaire est examinée à travers trois cas précédents d'héritage contesté de terres arables qui appartenaient aux Noirs de la région libre du Msengezi. Chaque étude de cas révèle diffèrentes facettes de l'articulation des systèmes légaux indigènes et importés, située sur un fond politique de capitalisme colonial avec différenciation de races. Enfin, certains des problèmes posés par la continuité de ce dualisme légal au Zimbabwe indépendant sont brièvement identifiés.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © International African Institute 1987

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Bourdillon, M. F. C. 1975. ‘Is “customary” law customary?’, NADA, 11 (2), 140–49.Google Scholar
Bourdillon, M. F. C. 1976a. The Shona Peoples. Gwelo: Mambo Press.Google Scholar
Bourdillon, M. F. C. 1976b. Myths About Africans. Gwelo: Mambo Press.Google Scholar
Chanock, M. 1978. ‘Neo-traditionalism and the customary law in Malawi’, African Law Studies, 16, 8091.Google Scholar
Chavunduka, G. L. 1978. ‘Changing Life Goals and Life Styles of African Urban Workers with Special Reference to Pension Schemes’, address to the annual conference of the Rhodesian Association of Pension Funds, Salisbury (mimeograph).Google Scholar
Chavunduka, G. L. 1982. Witches, Witchcraft and the Law in Zimbabwe. ZINATHA Occasional Paper No. 1. Harare: Zimbabwe National Traditional Healers' Association.Google Scholar
Cheater, A. P. 1981. ‘Women and their participation in commercial agricultural production: the case of medium-scale freehold in Zimbabwe’, Development and Change, 12 (3), 349–77.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Cheater, A. P. 1984. Idioms of Accumulation. Gweru: Mambo Press.Google Scholar
Cheater, A. P. 1986. ‘The role and position of women in pre-colonial and colonial Zimbabwe’, Zambezia, 13 (2), pp. 65 ff.Google Scholar
Child, H. F. 1965. The History and Extent of Recognition of Tribal Law in Rhodesia. Salisbury: Government Printer.Google Scholar
Colson, E. 1963. ‘Land rights and land use among the Valley Tonga of the Rhodesian Federation: the background to the Kariba resettlement programme’, in D., Biebuyck (ed.), African Agrarian Systems, pp. 137–56. London: Oxford University Press for the International African Institute.Google Scholar
Colson, E. 1971. The Social Consequences of Resettlement. Manchester: Manchester University Press for the Institute of African Studies, University of Zambia.Google Scholar
Elton-Mills, M. G., and Wilson, M. H. 1952. Keiskammahoek Rural Survey. Vol. 4: Land Tenure. Pietermaritzburg: Shooter & Shuter.Google Scholar
Fanon, F. 1967. Towards the African Revolution. New York: Monthly Review Press.Google Scholar
Garbett, G. K. 1963. ‘The Land Husbandry Act of Southern Rhodesia’, in D., Biebuyck (ed.), African Agrarian Systems', pp. 185202. London: Oxford University Press for the International African Institute.Google Scholar
Gluckman, M. 1965. The Ideas of Barotse Jurisprudence. New Haven: Yale University Press.Google Scholar
Gluckman, M. 1967. The Judicial Process among the Barotse of Northern Rhodesia (2nd edn). Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Gluckman, M. 1974. African Traditional Law in Historical Perspective. London: Oxford University Press for the British Academy.Google Scholar
Goldin, B., and Gelfand, M. 1975. African Law and Custom in Rhodesia. Cape Town: Juta.Google Scholar
Holleman, J. F. 1952. Shona Customary Law. Manchester: Manchester University Press.Google Scholar
Holleman, J. F. 1955. ‘Indigenous administration of justice’, NADA, 32: 41–8.Google Scholar
Holleman, J. F. 1979. ‘Disparities and uncertainties in African law and judicial authority: a Rhodesian case study’, African Law Studies, 17: 135.Google Scholar
Krygier, M. 1980. ‘Anthropological approaches’, in Kamenka, E. and Tay, A. E.-S. (eds.), Law and Social Control. London: Edward Arnold.Google Scholar
Malinowski, B. 1926. Crime and Custom in Savage Society. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Moore, S. F. 1978. Law as Process. London: Routledge & Kegan Paul.Google Scholar
Palmer, R. H. 1977. Land and Racial Domination in Rhodesia. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Roberts, S. 1979. Order and Dispute. Harmondsworth: Penguin.Google Scholar
Seedat, Z. K. 1969. ‘The Natal Code of Law as it affects African Women in the Changing Situation of Today’, Honours thesis, Department of African Studies, University of Natal, Durban.Google Scholar
Smith, M. G. 1965. ‘The sociological framework of law’, in H., Kuper and L., Kuper (eds.), African Law: adaptation and development. Berkeley/Los Angeles: University of California Press.Google Scholar
Snyder, F. G. 1982. ‘Colonialism and legal form: the creation of “customary law” in Senegal’, in C., Sumner (ed.), Crime, Justice and Underdevelopment. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Sweet, C. L. 1982. ‘Inventing crime: British colonial land policy in Tanganyika’, in C., Sumner (ed.), Crime, Justice and Underdevelopment. London: Heinemann.Google Scholar
Werbner, R. P. 1975. ‘Land, movement and status among Kalanga of Botswana’, in M., Fortes, and S., Patterson (eds.), Studies in African Social Anthropology, pp. 95–120. London: Academic Press.Google Scholar
Wilson, M. H. 1971. ‘The growth of peasant communities’, in Wilson, M. and Thompson, L. (eds.), The Oxford History of South Africa, Vol. II, pp. 49103. Oxford: Clarendon Press.Google Scholar
Rhodesia and Nyasaland. 1957. Dokotera vs The Master, SR 697–705.Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia. 1925. Report of the Land Commission, CSR 3, 1926.Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1927. Native Affairs Act (No. 14).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1929. Deceased Estates Succession Act (No. 14).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1930. Land Apportionment Art (No. 30).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1933. Native Wills Act (No. 13).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1937. Native Law and Courts Act (No. 33).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1939. Administration of Estates Act (cap. 47).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1939. Native Affairs Act (cap. 72).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1950 Native Marriages Act (No. 23).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1954. Deceased Estates Succession Amendment Act (No. 26).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1960. Land Apportionment Amendment Act (No. 54).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1963. African Marriages Act (cap. 105).Google Scholar
Southern Rhodesia 1963. African Wills Act (cap. 108).Google Scholar
Rhodesia. 1967. Tribal Trust Land Act (No. 9).Google Scholar
Rhodesia 1976. African Wills Amendment Act (No. 3).Google Scholar
Rhodesia 1976. Report of the Select Committee on Testate and Intestate Succession.Google Scholar
Zimbabwe. 1980. District Councils Act (cap. 231).Google Scholar
Zimbabwe 1981. Customary Law and Primary Courts Act (No. 6).Google Scholar
Zimbabwe 1985 Matrimonial Causes Art (No. 33).Google Scholar