Critical analysis of the impact of the common law on African indigenous law of inheritance a case study of post colonial legislation in Zimbabwe

The study looks at the main features of African indigenous law of succession and inheritance in Zimbabwe. It draws a distinction between the forms of inheritance practised between the two major ethnic groups, the Shona and the Ndebele. Whilst the research was mainly aimed at these two groups an inve...

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Bibliographic Details
Main Author: Gwarinda, Tafira Albert
Format: Others
Language:English
Published: University of Fort Hare 2009
Subjects:
Online Access:http://hdl.handle.net/10353/161
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spelling ndltd-netd.ac.za-oai-union.ndltd.org-ufh-vital-111102017-12-21T04:22:53ZCritical analysis of the impact of the common law on African indigenous law of inheritance a case study of post colonial legislation in ZimbabweGwarinda, Tafira AlbertInheritance and succession -- Zimbabwe -- Law and legislationTribal government -- ZimbabweCustomary law -- ZimbabweZimbabwe -- Law and legislationThe study looks at the main features of African indigenous law of succession and inheritance in Zimbabwe. It draws a distinction between the forms of inheritance practised between the two major ethnic groups, the Shona and the Ndebele. Whilst the research was mainly aimed at these two groups an investigation into inheritance practice by the South African Zulu and Xhosa counterparts was also made. An investigation into the impact of western influence on succession and inheritance was made taking a look at colonial legislation and case law, the general deduction being that it was a vehicle for attaching customary law to a western type law. After independence there was the issue of the impact of constitutionalism and international human rights law on succession in post colonial Zimbabwe. These were tools for change by bringing in notions of equality between men and women, issues that were highlighted in the cornerstone case of Magaya v Magaya, which was in turn discussed in the light of the Mthemu v Letsela and Bhe trilogy of cases in South Africa. In the final chapter there is a discussion of possibilities of reform and the future of customary law in Zimbabwe the highlight here being conducting proper legal research to ascertain the true purpose of custom.University of Fort HareFaculty of Law2009ThesisMastersLLM156 leaves; 30 cmpdfvital:11110http://hdl.handle.net/10353/161EnglishUniversity of Fort Hare
collection NDLTD
language English
format Others
sources NDLTD
topic Inheritance and succession -- Zimbabwe -- Law and legislation
Tribal government -- Zimbabwe
Customary law -- Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe -- Law and legislation
spellingShingle Inheritance and succession -- Zimbabwe -- Law and legislation
Tribal government -- Zimbabwe
Customary law -- Zimbabwe
Zimbabwe -- Law and legislation
Gwarinda, Tafira Albert
Critical analysis of the impact of the common law on African indigenous law of inheritance a case study of post colonial legislation in Zimbabwe
description The study looks at the main features of African indigenous law of succession and inheritance in Zimbabwe. It draws a distinction between the forms of inheritance practised between the two major ethnic groups, the Shona and the Ndebele. Whilst the research was mainly aimed at these two groups an investigation into inheritance practice by the South African Zulu and Xhosa counterparts was also made. An investigation into the impact of western influence on succession and inheritance was made taking a look at colonial legislation and case law, the general deduction being that it was a vehicle for attaching customary law to a western type law. After independence there was the issue of the impact of constitutionalism and international human rights law on succession in post colonial Zimbabwe. These were tools for change by bringing in notions of equality between men and women, issues that were highlighted in the cornerstone case of Magaya v Magaya, which was in turn discussed in the light of the Mthemu v Letsela and Bhe trilogy of cases in South Africa. In the final chapter there is a discussion of possibilities of reform and the future of customary law in Zimbabwe the highlight here being conducting proper legal research to ascertain the true purpose of custom.
author Gwarinda, Tafira Albert
author_facet Gwarinda, Tafira Albert
author_sort Gwarinda, Tafira Albert
title Critical analysis of the impact of the common law on African indigenous law of inheritance a case study of post colonial legislation in Zimbabwe
title_short Critical analysis of the impact of the common law on African indigenous law of inheritance a case study of post colonial legislation in Zimbabwe
title_full Critical analysis of the impact of the common law on African indigenous law of inheritance a case study of post colonial legislation in Zimbabwe
title_fullStr Critical analysis of the impact of the common law on African indigenous law of inheritance a case study of post colonial legislation in Zimbabwe
title_full_unstemmed Critical analysis of the impact of the common law on African indigenous law of inheritance a case study of post colonial legislation in Zimbabwe
title_sort critical analysis of the impact of the common law on african indigenous law of inheritance a case study of post colonial legislation in zimbabwe
publisher University of Fort Hare
publishDate 2009
url http://hdl.handle.net/10353/161
work_keys_str_mv AT gwarindatafiraalbert criticalanalysisoftheimpactofthecommonlawonafricanindigenouslawofinheritanceacasestudyofpostcoloniallegislationinzimbabwe
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