Innovation in a Hybrid System: The Example of Nepal

Authors

  • Lukas Heckendorn Urscheler University of Fribourg

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2012/v15i3a2504

Keywords:

Nepal, hybridity, hybrid legal system, Indian common law, law of torts, customary practice, ethnic groups

Abstract

The Nepali legal tradition is a legal hybrid in many regards. Nepal was not colonised by a Western state, and the Hindu legal tradition therefore dominated all areas of law until the middle of the 20th century. Since the 1950s there has been a strong influence of Indian common law. It is probably for this reason that comparative classifications that include Nepal see the legal system as a mixture of common law and customary law. However, other mixtures mark the Nepali legal tradition. French law inspired the ruler in the 19th century, and that influence can still be found in the formal law. In addition, the plurality of Nepalese society made it necessary to provide space for different customary regimes to coexist with the formal Hindu law. When it comes to innovations within the legal system, including international law, the different ingredients interact.

 

In family-related matters, the case-law of the Nepali Supreme Court illustrates the confrontation between international legal standards and the traditional rules. The Supreme Court has referred to the culturally conditioned discrimination against women and called for a thorough (political) analysis in order to eliminate discrimination without a radical change of culture. In the area of discrimination against homo- and transsexuals the Supreme Court took a more innovative approach. It remains to be seen, however, if such a change is effective beyond the courtroom.

 

In the area of private financial compensation for wrongs, the formal (written) Nepali law does not have a general concept of tort. Compensation is generally integrated within the ambit of criminal law. Field research indicates that it would be possible to resort to existing customary principles of compensation rather than to the relatively complex common law of torts favoured by some Nepali scholars. However, this approach might not be without difficulty, as it might imply admitting the “superiority” of the customary practices of ethnic groups of lower standing in society.

 

The example of Nepal shows that innovation in a hybrid system is often marked by the difficulty of – at least apparently – contradictory elements and layers of the legal system. There might be a tendency towards choosing the dominant or the most easily accessible solution. This paper suggests that the hybrid nature of the legal system offers opportunities that could be taken in order to achieve effective change and appropriate solutions.

    

Downloads

Download data is not yet available.

References

Bibliography

Acharya 2003 KSL Journal

Acharya MP "The Adversarial v. Inquisitorial Models of Justice" 2003 KSL Journal 63-70

Doniger and Smith Laws of Manu

Doniger W and Smith BK The Laws of Manu (Penguin Books New Delhi 1991)

Donlan "Comparative Law"

Donlan SP "Comparative Law and Hybrid Legal Traditions – An Introduction" in Cashin Ritaine E, Sychold M and Donlan SP (eds) Comparative Law and Hybrid Legal Traditions (Schulthess Zurich 2010)

Hellner 1974 AJCL

Hellner J "Modern Swedish Perspectives" 1974 AJCL 1-16

Heusten and Buckley Torts

Heusten RFV and Buckley RA Salmond and Heuston on the Law of Torts 21st ed (Sweet and Maxwell London 1996)

Höfer Caste Hierarchy

Höfer A The Caste Hierarchy and the State in Nepal (Universitätsverlag Wagner Innsbruck 1979)

Kandel Property Rights

Kandel DP Property Rights of Woman in Nepal (Ratna Pustak Bhandar Kathmandu 2001)

MacDonald 1968 L'Homme Revue Française d'Anthropologie

MacDonald AW "La sorcellerie dans le code népalais de 1853" 1968 L'Homme Revue Française d'Anthropologie 62-69

Malagodi 2008 Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism

Malagodi M "Forging the Nepali Nation through Law: A Reflection on the Use of Western Legal Tools in a Himalayan Kingdom" 2008 Studies in Ethnicity and Nationalism 433-452

Mattei 1997 AJCL

Mattei U "Three Patterns of Law: Taxonomy and Change in the World's Legal System" 1997 AJCL 5-44

Menski Comparative Law

Menski WF Comparative Law in a Global Context: The Legal Systems of Asia and Africa 2nd ed (Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2006)

Pradhananga Homicide Law

Pradhananga RB Homicide Law in Nepal: Concept, History and Judicial Practice (Ratna Pustak Bhandar Kathmandu 2001)

Sangroula Concepts and Evolution of Human Rights

Sangroula Y Concepts and Evolution of Human Rights: Nepalese Perspective (Nebula Printers Kathmandu 2005)

Sangroula Criminal Justice System

Sangroula Y Criminal Justice System (Kathmandu, forthcoming)

Timalsena (ed) Landmark Decisions

Timalsena RK (ed) Some Landmark Decisions of the Supreme Court of Nepal (Supreme Court Kathmandu 2003)

Turin Nepali Times

Turin M 'This land is my land … (and I'm a woman)' Nepali Times 24-31 August 2001 17

Twining General Jurisprudence

Twining W General Jurisprudence: Understanding Law from a Global Perspective (Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2009)

Twining Globalisation

Twining W Globalisation and Legal Theory (Cambridge University Press Cambridge 2000)

Urscheler "Multidimensional Hybridity"

Urscheler LH "Multidimensional Hybridity – Nepali Law from a Comparative Perspective" in Cashin Ritaine E, Sychold M and Donlan SP (eds) Comparative Law and Hybrid Legal Traditions (Schulthess Zurich 2010)

Register of legislation

Amending Some Nepal Acts to Maintain Gender Equality 2063 BS (2006)

Caste Based Discrimination and Untouchability (Offence and Punishment) Act 2011

Constitution of the Kingdom of Nepal 1990

Consumer Protection Act 1998

Eleventh Amendment of the Country Code 2058 BS (2001, published 2002)

Human Trafficking and Transportation (Control) Act 2007

Muluki Ain 2020 (1971) (Country Code)

State Cases Act 1992

Tort Liability Act 1972

Vehicle and Transport Management Act 1991

Register of case law and court documents

MS Meera Kumari Dhungana v HMG Ministry of Law, Justice and Parliamentary Affairs Writ No 8392, 2050 BS (1993)

Writ No 917 of the year 2064 (BS) (2007)

Register of internet sources

Anon 2011 articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com

Anon 2011 'New law threatens to crush Nepal's gays' The Times of India 9 June 2011 articles.timesofindia.indiatimes.com/2011-06-09/south-asia/29638154_1_sunil-babu-pant-gay-rights-gay-bar [date of use 21 Jun 2011]

Ghai and Cottrell Date Unknown www.undp.org.np

Ghai Y and Cottrell J Date Unknown Roadmap to a New Constitution? www.undp.org.np/constitutionbuilding-archive/elibrary/constitutionnepal/Roadmap%20English.pdf [date of use 12 Nov 2011]

Haviland 2006 news.bbc.co.uk

Haviland C 2006 Parallel Justice, Maoist Style news.bbc.co.uk/2/hi/south_asia/6048272.stm [date of use 20 Jun 2011]

Jica 2010 www.jica.go.jp

Jica 2010 Nepal Office Quarterly Newsletter, Vol. 57 (April to June 2010) www.jica.go.jp/nepal/english/office/others/index.html [date of use 20 Jun 2011]

Nepal Law Commission Date Unknown www.lawcommission.gov.np

Nepal Law Commission Date Unknown Laws and Documents www.lawcommission.gov.np/en/documents.html [date of use 20 Jun 2011]

Malagodi 2010 soas.academia.edu

Malagodi M 2010 Constitutional developments in a Himalayan Kingdom: The Experience of Nepal soas.academia.edu/MaraMalagodi/Papers/203577/Constitutional_Developments_in_a_Himalayan_Kingdom_The_Experience_of_Nepal [date of use 10 Jun 2011]

OHCHR Date Unknown nepal.ohchr.org

OHCHR Nepal Date Unknown Nepal nepal.ohchr.org [date of use 12 Nov 2011]

Örücü 2008 www.ejcl.org

Örücü E 2008 "What is a Mixed Legal System: Exclusion or Expansion?" EJCL www.ejcl.org/121/art121-15.pdf [date of use 22 Jun 2011]

Palmer 2008 www.ejcl.org

Palmer VV 2008 "Two Rival Theories of Mixed Legal Systems" EJCL www.ejcl.org/121/art121-16.pdf [date of use 22 Jun 2011]

Töpperwien 2009 www.forumfed.org

Töpperwien N 2009 Drawing the Federal Map of Nepal www.forumfed.org/en/products/magazine/Nepal2009/Nepal-federal-map.php [date of use 10 Nov 2011]

UNDP Date Unknown www.undp.org.np

UNDP Nepal Date Unknown Electronic Library www.undp.org.np/constitutionbuilding-archive/elibrary [date of use 12 Nov 2011]

Urscheler 2008 www.ksl.edu.np

Urscheler LH 2008 "Taking Statutes Seriously" Kathmandu Law Review www.ksl.edu.np/cpanel/pics/kathmandu_law_review_vol1_08.pdf [date of use 21 Jun 2011]

University of Ottawa World Legal Systems Research Group Date Unknown www.juriglobe.ca

University of Ottawa World Legal Systems Research Group Date Unknown Introductory Remarks www.juriglobe.ca/eng/sys-juri/intro.php [date of use 21 Jun 2011]

Published

29-05-2017

Issue

Section

Conference Papers

How to Cite

Urscheler, L. H. (2017). Innovation in a Hybrid System: The Example of Nepal. Potchefstroom Electronic Law Journal, 15(3), 67-118. https://doi.org/10.17159/1727-3781/2012/v15i3a2504

Similar Articles

571-580 of 1181

You may also start an advanced similarity search for this article.