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ID144225
Title ProperLicence to kill
Other Title Informationthe murderous outrages act and the rule of law in colonial india, 1867–1925
LanguageENG
AuthorCONDOS, MARK
Summary / Abstract (Note)In 1867, the Government of India passed one of the most brutal-minded and draconian laws ever created in colonial India. Known as the ‘Murderous Outrages Act’, this law gave colonial officials along the North-West Frontier wide powers to transgress India's legal codes in order to summarily execute and dispose of individuals identified as ‘fanatics’. Arguments for the creation and preservation of this law invariably centred around claims about the purportedly ‘exceptional’ character of frontier governance, particularly the idea that this was a region that existed in a perpetual state of war and crisis. Far from being peripheral in its impact, this article explores how this law both drew upon and enabled a wider legal culture that pervaded India in the wake of 1857. It argues that this law was a signal example of British attempts to mask the brute power of executive authority through legalistic terms, and was also evocative of a distinctly ‘warlike’ logic of colonial legality.
`In' analytical NoteModern Asian Studies Vol. 50, No.2; Mar 2016: p.479-517
Journal SourceModern Asian Studies Vol: 50 No 2
Key WordsColonial India ;  Licence to Kill ;  Murderous Outrages Act ;  Rule of Law in ;  1867–1925


 
 
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