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Legal Dissonance

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Describes how Papua New Guinea's two most powerful legal orders - customary and state law - undermine each other in criminal matters. Explains how a lack of co-ordination in the punishing ...
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  • 01 July 2015
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Papua New Guinea’s two most powerful legal orders — customary law and state law —undermine one another in criminal matters. This phenomenon, called legal dissonance, partly explains the low level of personal security found in many parts of the country. This book demonstrates that a lack of coordination in the punishing of wrong behavior is both problematic for legal orders themselves and for those who are subject to such legal phenomena Legal dissonance can lead to behavior being simultaneously promoted by one legal order and punished by the other, leading to injustice, and, perhaps more importantly, undermining the ability of both legal orders to deter wrongdoing.

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Price: $135.00
Pages: 188
Publisher: Berghahn Books
Imprint: Berghahn Books
Publication Date: 01 July 2015
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9781782386483
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: SOCIAL SCIENCE/Criminology, POLITICAL SCIENCE/Political Freedom & Security/Law Enforcement
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“This is a valuable, original contribution to the issue of the development of state policy on criminal law in a society in which there is a strong unofficial customary law for the remedying of wrongs.”  ·  Gordon R. Woodman, University of Birmingham

Shaun Larcom is Lecturer at the School of Oriental and African Studies, University of London and a departmental fellow at the Department of Land Economy, University of Cambridge.  He is also a research associate at the Von Hügel Institute at St Edmund's College Cambridge. He has published a number of book chapters and journal articles, including in the Law and Society Review, Journal of Legal Pluralism, the Law and Development Review, and the Review of Law and Economics.
 

List of Illiustrations
Acknowledgments

Introduction: Papua New Guinea, Legal Pluralism, and Law and Economics

Chapter 1. Customary Law and the State Criminal Law
Chapter 2. Historical Overview of the State, Criminal Law and Customary Law
Chapter 3. Empirical Study of the Sanction of Wrongs in the New Guinea Islands
Chapter 4. Legal Dissonance in Papua New Guinea
Chapter 5. Past Reforms that Failed

Conclusion: Reforming the Prosecution Process

References