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POL15


Author-critic forum State-Building as Lawfare: Custom, Sharia, and State Law in Postwar Chechnya (Cambridge University Press, 2023) by Egor Lazarev 
Convenor:
Egor Lazarev (Yale)
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Chairs:
Jennifer Murtazashvili (University of Pittsburgh)
Jesse Driscoll (University of California San Diego)
Discussants:
Regine Spector (University of Massachusetts-Amherst)
Pauline Jones (University of Michigan)
Format:
Scholarship-in-Progress forum
Theme:
Political Science, International Relations, and Law
Location:
Posvar: PH5200
Sessions:
Friday 20 October, -
Time zone: America/New_York

Abstract:

In this author-critic forum, scholars of state formation, customary law, conflict, and religious politics (Jennifer Murtazashvili, Pauline Jones, Regine Spector, Jesse Driscoll, and Robert Crews) discuss Egor Lazarev’s new book State-Building as Lawfare: Custom, Sharia and State Law in Postwar Chechnya, published by Cambridge University Press in 2023. The book explores the use of state and non-state legal systems by both politicians and ordinary people in postwar Chechnya. It addresses two interrelated puzzles: why do local rulers tolerate and even promote non-state legal systems at the expense of state law, and why do some members of repressed ethnic minorities choose to resolve their everyday disputes using state legal systems instead of non-state alternatives? The book documents how the rulers of Chechnya promote and reinvent customary law and Sharia in order to borrow legitimacy from tradition and religion, increase autonomy from the metropole, and accommodate communal authorities and former rebels. At the same time, the book shows how prolonged armed conflict disrupted the traditional social hierarchies and pushed some Chechen women to use state law, spurring state formation from below. The forum will put Chechnya and more broadly the North Caucasus in comparison with Central Asian polities.