TY - BOOK AU - Massoud,Mark Fathi TI - Law's fragile state: colonial, authoritarian, and humanitarian legacies in Sudan T2 - Cambridge studies in law and society SN - 9781107026070 (hbk.) AV - KTQ1726 .M37 2013 U1 - 349.624 23 PY - 2013/// CY - Cambridge [England] PB - Cambridge University Press KW - Rule of law KW - Sudan KW - History KW - Law KW - Political aspects KW - Islamic law KW - Human rights KW - Authoritarianism KW - LAW / General KW - bisacsh KW - Politics and government N1 - Includes bibliographical references (pages 249-265) and index; Lawfare and warfare in Sudan -- The colonial path to the rule of law, 1898-1956 -- Law in a State of Crisis, 1956-1989 -- Authoritarian legal politics and Islamic law, 1989-2011 -- Law and civil society, 1956-2011 -- Humanitarian legal politics in an authoritarian state, 2005-2011 -- Reflections on legal politics N2 - "How do a legal order and the rule of law develop in a war-torn state? Using his field research in Sudan, the author uncovers how colonial administrators, postcolonial governments, and international aid agencies have used legal tools, practices, and resources to promote stability and their own visions of the rule of law amid political violence and war in Sudan. Tracing the dramatic development of three forms of legal politics - colonial, authoritarian, and humanitarian - this book contributes to a growing body of scholarship on law in authoritarian regimes and on human rights and legal empowerment programs in the Global South. Refuting the conventional wisdom of a legal vacuum in failed states, this book reveals how law matters deeply even in the most extreme cases of states still fighting for political stability"-- ER -