Civil Society and the Lawyers' Movement of Pakistan

被引:12
作者
Shafqat, Sahar [1 ]
机构
[1] St Marys Coll Maryland, Polit Sci, St Marys City, MD 20686 USA
来源
LAW AND SOCIAL INQUIRY-JOURNAL OF THE AMERICAN BAR FOUNDATION | 2018年 / 43卷 / 03期
关键词
RULE; LAW;
D O I
10.1111/lsi.12283
中图分类号
D9 [法律]; DF [法律];
学科分类号
0301 ;
摘要
This article examines the conditions under which judiciaries become politicized under authoritarian regimes, focusing on the 2007-2009 lawyers' movement of Pakistan. The prodemocracy movement arose after the sacking of the Supreme Court Chief Justice by General Musharraf, and was remarkably successful in removing Musharraf and restoring the sacked judges. Although the conventional wisdom is that such judiciaries are quiescent, I argue that judicial actors can play important roles in democratization, but only under certain conditions. In the case of Pakistan, civil society actors were vital in helping the judiciary become politicized and in linking the lawyers' movement to the larger cause of democratization. I argue that, otherwise, the lawyers' movement could not have headed the movement that eventually led to the restoration of democracy. Specifically, I argue that civil society played a crucial role, framing the movement as broad, national, and prodemocracy, which enabled it to overthrow the authoritarian regime.
引用
收藏
页码:889 / 914
页数:26
相关论文
共 50 条
[31]   When Civil Society Uses an Iron Fist: The Roles of Private Associations in Rulemaking and Adjudication [J].
Ellickson, Robert C. .
AMERICAN LAW AND ECONOMICS REVIEW, 2016, 18 (02) :235-271
[32]   From Rights to Claims: The Role of Civil Society in Making Rights Real for Vulnerable Workers [J].
Gleeson, Shannon .
LAW & SOCIETY REVIEW, 2009, 43 (03) :669-700
[33]   Exploring civil society perspectives on the situation of human rights defenders in the Commonwealth of Independent States [J].
Chaney, Paul .
CENTRAL ASIAN SURVEY, 2023, 42 (02) :293-318
[34]   Constitutionalizing Mass Surveillance in the EU: Civil Society Demands, Judicial Activism, and Legislative Inertia [J].
Celeste, Edoardo ;
Formici, Giulia .
GERMAN LAW JOURNAL, 2024, 25 (03) :427-446
[35]   Restrictive National Laws Affecting Human Rights Civil Society Organizations: A Legal Analysis [J].
Wilson, Elizabeth A. .
JOURNAL OF HUMAN RIGHTS PRACTICE, 2016, 8 (03) :329-357
[36]   Protecting the Public's Health in Pandemics: Reflections on Policy Deliberation and the Role of Civil Society in Democracy [J].
Morrissey, Mary Beth Quaranta ;
Rivera-Agosto, Jorge L. .
FRONTIERS IN PUBLIC HEALTH, 2021, 9
[37]   Global Concepts, Local Meanings: How Civil Society Interprets and Uses Human Rights in Asia [J].
Setiawan, Ken M. P. ;
Spires, Anthony J. .
ASIAN STUDIES REVIEW, 2021, 45 (01) :1-12
[38]   Brokering Immigrant Worker Rights: An Examination of Local Immigration Control, Administrative Capacity and Civil Society [J].
Gleeson, Shannon .
JOURNAL OF ETHNIC AND MIGRATION STUDIES, 2015, 41 (03) :470-492
[39]   Civil Society-Driven Drug Policy Reform for Health and Human Welfare-India [J].
Vallath, Nandini ;
Tandon, Tripti ;
Pastrana, Tania ;
Lohman, Diederik ;
Husain, S. Asra ;
Cleary, James ;
Ramanath, Ganpati ;
Rajagopal, M. R. .
JOURNAL OF PAIN AND SYMPTOM MANAGEMENT, 2017, 53 (03) :518-532
[40]   Turkish civil society, normative power Europe, and appeals to restore the EU's transformative power [J].
Tabak, Huesrev ;
Renda, Kadri Kaan ;
Ozcelik, Ali Onur .
SOUTHEAST EUROPEAN AND BLACK SEA STUDIES, 2025,