Full Text Available

Note: Clicking the button above will open the full text document at the original institutional repository in a new window.

Judicial recognition of living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria

The interaction of customary law with state law raises challenges for policy-makers in postcolonial societies. This study contends that these challenges are primarily caused by state recognition of customary law without proper attention to how people adapt it to modern conditions vastly different fr...

Full description

Saved in:
Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Diala, Anthony Chima
Other Authors: Himonga, Chuma N
Format: Thesis
Language:English
English
Published: Department of Private Law 2025
Subjects:
Tags: Add Tag
No Tags, Be the first to tag this record!
_version_ 1867613211412398080
access_status_str Open Access
author Diala, Anthony Chima
author2 Himonga, Chuma N
author_browse Diala, Anthony Chima
Himonga, Chuma N
author_facet Himonga, Chuma N
Diala, Anthony Chima
author_sort Diala, Anthony Chima
collection Thesis
description The interaction of customary law with state law raises challenges for policy-makers in postcolonial societies. This study contends that these challenges are primarily caused by state recognition of customary law without proper attention to how people adapt it to modern conditions vastly different from its agrarian origins. Recognition denotes the manner customary law norms and institutions are 'incorporated into the state legal system' or enforced by state organs such as courts. It often raises the question of which version of customary law is recognised. Scholars have identified two broad types - official customary law and living customary law. Generally, they define living customary law as the norms that regulate people's daily lives, while official customary law represents the version perceived by state officials typically as legal rules, and often recorded in codes, legislation, and law reports. Drawing from the semi-autonomous social field theory, this study conceptualises living customary law as the law that emerges from people's adaptation of customs to socio-economic changes. It argues that because it emerges in this manner, its judicial recognition is inhibited by a rule-based approach to adjudication. The study utilises literature review, interviews, archival searches, and case analysis to investigate the ways in which judges acknowledge living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria. It finds that while women are generally apathetic to matrimonial property claims, judges are generally insensitive to customary law's process-oriented character and pay scant attention to how customs are being adapted to socio-economic changes. It further finds that judicial recognition of living customary law is hampered by a colonial legacy of rule-based adjudication, disregard for the values that inform customary law, and judges' non-resort to constitutional values that could promote women's matrimonial property rights. Connected to this finding is the failure of the Constitution to provide for these rights and define customary law's status in the legal system. The study concludes that judicial recognition of living customary law is inhibited by Nigeria's poor legal framework and the technical nature of court rules. It suggests that the manner people adapt customs to socio-economic changes should guide judicial and legislative approaches to customary law
format Thesis
id oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41448
institution University of Cape Town (South Africa)
language English
eng
last_indexed 2026-06-10T12:32:31.718Z
license_str Not specified — see source repository
provenance_str_mv Harvested via OAI-PMH from UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
publishDate 2025
publishDateRange 2025
publishDateSort 2025
publisher Department of Private Law
publisherStr Department of Private Law
record_format dspace
source_str UCTD — University of Cape Town Open Access Repository
spelling oai:open.uct.ac.za:11427/41448 Judicial recognition of living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria Diala, Anthony Chima Himonga, Chuma N judicial recognition living customary law matrimonial property rights Nigeria The interaction of customary law with state law raises challenges for policy-makers in postcolonial societies. This study contends that these challenges are primarily caused by state recognition of customary law without proper attention to how people adapt it to modern conditions vastly different from its agrarian origins. Recognition denotes the manner customary law norms and institutions are 'incorporated into the state legal system' or enforced by state organs such as courts. It often raises the question of which version of customary law is recognised. Scholars have identified two broad types - official customary law and living customary law. Generally, they define living customary law as the norms that regulate people's daily lives, while official customary law represents the version perceived by state officials typically as legal rules, and often recorded in codes, legislation, and law reports. Drawing from the semi-autonomous social field theory, this study conceptualises living customary law as the law that emerges from people's adaptation of customs to socio-economic changes. It argues that because it emerges in this manner, its judicial recognition is inhibited by a rule-based approach to adjudication. The study utilises literature review, interviews, archival searches, and case analysis to investigate the ways in which judges acknowledge living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria. It finds that while women are generally apathetic to matrimonial property claims, judges are generally insensitive to customary law's process-oriented character and pay scant attention to how customs are being adapted to socio-economic changes. It further finds that judicial recognition of living customary law is hampered by a colonial legacy of rule-based adjudication, disregard for the values that inform customary law, and judges' non-resort to constitutional values that could promote women's matrimonial property rights. Connected to this finding is the failure of the Constitution to provide for these rights and define customary law's status in the legal system. The study concludes that judicial recognition of living customary law is inhibited by Nigeria's poor legal framework and the technical nature of court rules. It suggests that the manner people adapt customs to socio-economic changes should guide judicial and legislative approaches to customary law 2025-06-02T11:48:45Z 2025-06-02T11:48:45Z 2016 2025-06-02T11:43:22Z Thesis / Dissertation Doctoral PhD http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41448 en eng application/pdf Department of Private Law Faculty of Law University of Cape Town
spellingShingle judicial recognition
living customary law
matrimonial property rights
Nigeria
Diala, Anthony Chima
Judicial recognition of living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria
thesis_degree_str Doctoral
title Judicial recognition of living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria
title_full Judicial recognition of living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria
title_fullStr Judicial recognition of living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria
title_full_unstemmed Judicial recognition of living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria
title_short Judicial recognition of living customary law in the context of women's matrimonial property rights in South-East Nigeria
title_sort judicial recognition of living customary law in the context of women s matrimonial property rights in south east nigeria
topic judicial recognition
living customary law
matrimonial property rights
Nigeria
url http://hdl.handle.net/11427/41448
work_keys_str_mv AT dialaanthonychima judicialrecognitionoflivingcustomarylawinthecontextofwomensmatrimonialpropertyrightsinsoutheastnigeria