Description |
1 online resource (509 pages) |
|
text file |
Contents |
Cover; Title page; Copyright page; About the Contributors; Contents; Foreword; Chapter One -- Identity, Originality and Hybridity in Jurisprudence and Social Theory: An Introduction; Introduction; The Lie of Animistic Earth Jurisprudence? Precolonial African Universities and the Foundations of Pan-African Jurisprudence; Becoming Posthuman? Humanoid Robots and the Implications for Labour and Family Jurisprudence; Outline of the Chapters; References. |
|
Chapter Two -- Beyond Eurocentric Human Rights Jurisprudence and Towards Animality? Humanoid Robots and the Decomposition of African Humanism and PersonhoodIntroduction; Humanism, Posthumanism and African Ubuntu/Chivanhu; Is Animistic Jurisprudence Indigenous or Is It Merely a Fad to Control Africans?; Conclusion; References; Chapter Three -- Colonialism, the Theft of History and the Quest for Justice for Africa; Introduction; Why the Theft of History as the Analytical Framework?; Mechanisms Used to Execute and Sustain the Theft of History. |
|
Ontological, Economic and Epistemological Thefts and the Loot CommitteeProcrastination is not the Thief of Time: Of Stolen African Times; The Elephants and their Drinking Water Sources; Rat Receiving Cats' Education; On the Theft of Democracy from Africa; Africa's Stolen University; The Western University in Africa; The Cartographical Misrepresentation of Africa as Theft; Re-historicisation as Restorative Justice for Africa; Towards the Decolonial Corner: The Ten Interventions and Africa's Quest for Restorative Justice; References. |
|
Chapter Four -- Revisiting Traditional African Land Ownership Practices Using Indigenous Knowledge Lenses: The Case of the Haya in TanzaniaIntroduction; Contextual Issues: Pre-colonial African Indigenous Land Ownership; Secure Land Ownership for Sustainable Growth: Conceptual Reflections; Historical Context of Land Ownership in Tanzania; Researching the Local: The Paradox of Land "Concessions" in Tanzania; Types of Land Ownership and their Relevance among Haya Farmers; Land Reform and its Implications on Traditional Land Ownership; Concluding Remarks; References. |
|
Chapter Five -- The Man, Human Rights, Transitional Justice and African Jurisprudence in the Twenty-First CenturyIntroduction; Problematising Human Rights; Of Humanitas and Anthropos; What are the Challenges Facing Human Rights Today?; Historicising 'the Man'; Unpacking the 'Human'; Coloniality of Power and Human Rights; Transitional Justice as a Mourn of the Weak; Are Aborigines Human?; Towards an African Human Rights Jurisprudence through Hunhu; Conclusion; References. |
|
Chapter Six -- Re-discoursing Jurisprudence for Africa in the 21st Century: Re-Centring Africa's Memory and Rememory through African-authored Literary Arts. |
Local Note |
eBooks on EBSCOhost EBSCO eBook Subscription Academic Collection - North America |
Subject |
Jurisprudence -- Africa.
|
|
Jurisprudence. |
|
Africa. |
|
Pan-Africanism.
|
|
Pan-Africanism. |
Genre/Form |
Electronic books.
|
Added Author |
Nhemachena, Artwell.
|
|
Warikandwa, Victor.
|
Other Form: |
Print version: Amoo, Samuel. Social and Legal Theory in the Age of Decoloniality : (Re- )Envisioning Pan-African Jurisprudence in the 21st Century. Oxford : Langaa RPCIG, ©2018 9789956550128 |
ISBN |
9956550493 |
|
9789956550494 (electronic book) |
|