Description:
Abstract:
"Burmese colonial history suggests that a legal system cannot operate independently from the
felt needs of the people who are supposed to obey the law. Despite a monopoly of force
for many decades, the British failed to create a sustainable legal system in Burma. Colonial
status shifted Burma?s economic role from subsistence agriculture to the generation of
large-scale exports. By undermining the traditional Burmese legal system and substituting
Western international standards of property rights, enforceability of contracts, and an independent judiciary
—
all attributes of what some consider to be the
?Rule of Law”—
the legal
system amplified and channelled destructive economic and social forces rather than containing
them. This paper examines traditional Burmese law, the administration of law in British
Burma, and the consequences of the new legal system for the country and its own stability.
The paper concludes by suggesting lessons for Myanmar today, and for the study of the
?Rule of Law." .....
Keywords: Rule of Law,
colonial law, law and custom, law and development, colonial
administration, Burma, Myanmar
Source/publisher:
Asian Journal of Law and Society / FirstView Article / January 2014, pp 1 - 1
Date of Publication:
2014-01-00
Date of entry:
2015-09-14
Grouping:
- Individual Documents
Category:
Language:
English
Local URL:
Format:
pdf
Size:
251.98 KB
