Type | Book Section - Effectuating normative change in customary legal systems: An end to ‘widow chasing’in Northern Namibia |
Title | Land, Law and Politics in Africa: Mediating Conflict and Reshaping the State |
Author(s) | |
Volume | 10 |
Publication (Day/Month/Year) | 2011 |
Page numbers | 315-333 |
URL | https://openaccess.leidenuniv.nl/bitstream/handle/1887/18534/ASC-075287668-3106-01.pdf?sequence=2#page=325 |
Abstract | Leaders of six Owambo traditional communities in Namibia met at a ‘Customary Law Workshop’ of Owambo Traditional Leaders in Ongwediva in northern Namibia in May 1993 to make recommendations to the traditional councils about harmonizing customary laws. One of the topics under discussion was the position of widows. Two issues were at stake. The first concerned the practice whereby a husband’s matrilineal family chased his widow back to her own matrilineal family after his death and the second was that women who remained on the land they had occupied with their husbands were required to pay the traditional leaders for the land in question. The traditional leaders at the workshop unanimously decided that widows should no longer be chased off their land or out of their homes and that they should not be asked to pay again for the land either. The new norms for protecting widows became well known and were enforced in Uukwambi, and the number of allegations of land grabbing has dropped significantly over the last 15 years to almost none today. This demonstrates a behavioural change regarding widows’ inheritance rights. The process of recording norms protecting widows’ rights in the written customary laws of Uukwambi has led to significant changes in local inheritance practices. This success is remarkable when contrasted with failed attempts in other African countries to change customary inheritance practices through statutory intervention. The self-recording process in the Uukwambi Traditional Authority presents a positive example of how normative change in African customary justice systems can be achieved. |
» | Namibia - Population and Housing Census 2001 |