Journal article
Criminal Justice in Precolonial Tswana Societies
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Publication Details Author list: Bennett B, Bolaane M Publication year: 2022 Volume number: 55 Issue number: 1 Start page: 69 End page: 88 Number of pages: 20 ISSN: 03617882 Languages: English |
Botswana is notable for its adherence to flogging and the death penalty in its criminal justice
system. These are typically claimed to be part of immemorial tradition, with Botswana’s customary courts
being understood as simply a modernized form of ancient practice. However, evidence from early written
sources suggests that there was a much more complex and inconsistent situation, in which compensation
and revenge were more common features, and murder was often regarded as a private matter. This
suggests that effective vertical justice by chiefs may be a relatively recent development of the late
precolonial period, representing more powerful rulers and larger political units, and later further
accentuated by colonial backing for chiefs who could maintain order. Some support for this may be found
in anthropological evidence about the Kgalagari villages in the 1960s, which may be seen as the nearest
observed modern analogue.
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