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42 Colum. J. Transnat'l L. 349 (2003-2004)
Rights, Culture, and Crime: The Role of Rule of Law for the Women of Afghanistan

handle is hein.journals/cjtl42 and id is 357 raw text is: Rights, Culture, and Crime: The Role of Rule
of Law for the Women of Afghanistan
MARK A. DRUMBL
This Article explores the role of rule of law in
redressing crimes and human rights abuses committed
against the    women     of  Afghanistan.     Mainstream
discourse approaches the situation binarily, obliging
women to choose between          international and    often
distant human rights, on the one hand, or proximate
cultural/religious norms, on the other, in order to
adjudicate gender crimes.       This can lead either to
externalized    justice   or,   in   the   case    of   the
implementation     of Afghan    local law, to     renewed
victimization of women in the name of redressing
abuses suffered     by  other women.       Local law     in
Afghanistan    is   reflected  in   codes   such   as   the
Pashtunwali. The Pashtunwali consists of a blend of
custom and practice that emerges from a context of
embedded conflict and is filtered through an Islamist
lens.   The   Pashtunwali propounds         a  restorative
approach to human rights abuse in which the abuse is
rectified when the family of the abuser transfers
money, goods, animals or, preferentially, young girls
Assistant Professor and Ethan Allen Faculty Fellow, School of Law, Washington &
Lee University. E-mail: drumblm@wlu.edu. Earlier versions of this Article were presented
in a number of venues, including the Annual Meeting of the Association for the Study of
Law, Culture and the Humanities (University of Pennsylvania Law School, March 8-10,
2002); the Annual Meeting of the International Studies Association (New Orleans, March
23-26, 2002); a panel discussion on the Taliban's 'Other' Crimes at the International Law
Association, International Law Weekend (New York City, October 2002); the Conference on
International Crimes Against Women (Case Western Reserve University School of Law,
October 10, 2003); and a faculty workshop at Washington & Lee University, School of Law.
Each of these presentations triggered helpful commentary and feedback for which I remain
grateful. Special thanks to Karima Bennoune for thoughtful comments on an earlier draft. I
would like to acknowledge the generous support of the Frances Lewis Law Center at the
Washington & Lee University School of Law, of its Director Blake Morant, and of Dean
David Partlett. Matt Earle provided outstanding research assistance.

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