Stéphane Voell is Lecturer at the Department for Cultural and Social Anthropology at the Philipps-University Marburg, Germany. He has carried out fieldwork in Georgia and Albania and organized numerous workshops, conferences and student excursions in the Caucasus. He specializes in law, state, ethnicity and conflict. Iwona Kaliszewska is Assistant Professor at the Institute of Ethnology and Cultural Anthropology at the University of Warsaw, Poland. She has carried out fieldwork in Dagestan and Chechnya which resulted in a book ’Matrioshka in Hijab’, co-authored by Maciej Falkowski. She specializes in political anthropology and Caucasus area studies.
’The timely drive to advance our understandings of legal pluralism is finding some of its richest material in the Caucasus past and present. This excellent volume, bringing together a model cohort of scholars from within the Caucasus and beyond, tells us why.’ Bruce Grant, New York University, USA ’In the large body of literature on strong societies and weak states the Caucasus has until now been neglected - this book fills this important gap. Some of the leading regional experts show us that even the Soviet state, though arguably strong if not totalitarian, could never manipulate the local ethnic societies on an ideological whim. This volume opens a fruitful conversation on the modern uses of customary norms and informality.’ Georgi Derluguian, New York University Abu Dhabi, United Arab Emirates and author of Bourdieu’s Secret Admirer in the Caucasus: A World-System Biography ’The contributors - some from the Caucasus and some from elsewhere, younger researchers as well as those who experienced the last years of the Soviet Union - bring an impressive diversity of theoretical stances and field experiences to bear on the themes of the state, politics and law in the lives of people from the South and North Caucasus. I believe this stimulating and useful collection will make a significant contribution to political and legal anthropology, as well as post-Soviet studies.’ Kevin Tuite, Université de Montréal, Canada ’The contributors to this book ask how people effectively deal with legal pluralism as an endemic condition of the Caucasus and make sense of this co-existence of different legal frameworks, no matter if connected to a state or not. From a political anthropological perspective in their diverse field studies they are connecting micro with macro levels and thus challenge Eurocentric assumptions. A very inspiring book about an increasingly interesting region.’ Oliver Reisner, Ilia State University, Georgia