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Published online by Cambridge University Press: 07 September 2015
The East India Company troops fighting the Burmese aggression on the frontier of Bengal in Eastern India “freed” upper and lower Assam territories in 1825. David Scott of the Bengal Service was appointed to oversee the establishment of civil and revenue administration in these frontier territories. He established a hierarchical multiple structure of “native courts”—called panchayats—as the chief medium of civil and criminal justice. This was ostensibly continuing a traditional Assamese form of dispute resolution—the mel; however, the British criminal jury as well as the expert assessor model animated the system. After his death in 1831, the system was brought in line with the rest of the Bengal administration based on the British court system. His experiment, paralleled in many other newly conquered and ceded districts from the Madras territories to Central India, suggests the use of this mode in post-conquest situations by British administrators in South Asia.
Amrita Shodhan is a Senior Teaching Fellow at the Department of History, SOAS, University of London. She is interested in the history of law, community, and governance; nationalism and ethnic/religious identities. I am grateful to Prof. James Jaffe for initiating the discussion on panchayats and to the members of the SOAS International Workshop: Rough and Ready Justice: Panchayats and Community Arbitration (January 2014), as well as members of the SOAS South Asia History Seminar for a stimulating discussion on an earlier version of this paper. Correspondence to Amrita Shodhan, Room 307, Thornhaugh St, Russell Square, London, WC 1H 0XG, UK. E-mail: [email protected].