From  The Militarization of Nigerian SocietyFrom: Colonial Systems of Control |
This chapter makes a demand not only on Nigeria’s political and civil society leaders but also on the international community, particularly policy-makers in Europe and the United States … |
Biko Agozino; Unyierie Idem |
50 |
2008 |
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The Power to CriminalizeViolence, Inequality and the Law |
Law’s power to criminalize–to turn a person into a criminal–is formidable. Traditional legal doctrine argues that law dispenses justice in an impartial and unbiased fashion. … |
Elizabeth Comack; Gillian Balfour |
199 |
2004 |
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From  The Somalia AffairA Personal Account of Speaking Truth to Power From: (Ab)Using Power |
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John Dixon |
12 |
2001 |
$1.44 Add
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From  The System I Have Come to KnowFrom: Colonial Systems of Control |
I was arrested on April 17,1992. I was taken to the Lagos State Police Command in Ikeja, where I was hung like a monkey from the ceiling, with my hands holding up the rest of my body. |
Sylvester Monday Anagaba |
3 |
2008 |
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From  The Tenth International Conference on Penal Abolition (ICOPA X)From: Colonial Systems of Control |
Following a long line of academic literature, and growing through activist affiliations, this chapter outlines penal abolitionism as it was presented to the Nigerian community in efforts to … |
Viviane Saleh-Hanna |
32 |
2008 |
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From  Unredressed WrongThe Extradition of Leonard Peltier from Canada From: (Ab)Using Power |
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Dianne L. Martin |
23 |
2001 |
$2.76 Add
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From  Women, Law, and Resistance in Northern Nigeria: Understanding the Inadequacies of Western ScholarshipFrom: Colonial Systems of Control |
This chapter focuses on women in the contemporary northern Nigerian context: their interactions with pluralities of law in northern Nigeria, and the modes of resistance they employ in facing … |
Viviane Saleh-Hanna |
61 |
2008 |
$6.10 Add
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