‘Different spaces, different laws’: The role of state forums in non-state dispute processing in India

Kokal K (2020)


Publication Type: Book chapter / Article in edited volumes

Publication year: 2020

Publisher: Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd.

Edited Volumes: Comparative Dispute Resolution

Pages Range: 506–518

ISBN: 9781786433039

DOI: 10.4337/9781786433039.00046

Abstract

This Chapter explores dispute processing in a fishermen’s village in the state of Maharashtra in western India. Her essay explores the manner in which spaces of the state, such as police stations and state courts, were considered and used by the Kol_i_ community in the village. Building upon empirical data she argues “that such use of spaces and places of the state reveals another translation of state law … and the manner in which it is optimized.” The ‘space’ at the core of this chapter is multidimensional in both its abstract and more tangible dimensions. But it also comprises different imaginations of space in between the spheres of the state and non-state. Thus, Kokal suggests, dispute processing represents an important site “that reveals the forms of use of these spaces, which are in themselves expressions of the manner in which laws are constituted and interpreted.”

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APA:

Kokal, K. (2020). ‘Different spaces, different laws’: The role of state forums in non-state dispute processing in India. In Maria F. Moscati, Michael Palmer, Marian Roberts (Eds.), Comparative Dispute Resolution. (pp. 506–518). Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd..

MLA:

Kokal, Kalindi. "‘Different spaces, different laws’: The role of state forums in non-state dispute processing in India." Comparative Dispute Resolution. Ed. Maria F. Moscati, Michael Palmer, Marian Roberts, Edward Elgar Publishing Ltd., 2020. 506–518.

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