‘Law is violence, not always (let alone necessarily) an alternative to it, Jens Meierhenrich brilliantly documents in this long-awaited masterpiece, in the process entirely overturning congratulatory, melodramatic, and orientalist depictions of local ‘justice.’ A genuinely monumental work, in insight as well as in scope.’
Samuel Moyn - Chancellor Kent Professor of Law and History, Yale Law School
‘Deeply informed theoretically, and truly interdisciplinary, The Violence of Law builds upon a granular account of Rwanda’s post-genocide experience, including a detailed ethnography of its widely noted gacaca courts, to develop an important argument of how legalism and ‘lawfare,’ consent and coercion, are simultaneously constructed and entangled in support of governmentality. The book deserves close attention from everyone interested in legal theory.’
Mark Tushnet - William Nelson Cromwell Professor of Law Emeritus, Harvard Law School
‘The Violence of Law is a first-rate critique of transitional justice as injustice. It reveals a jurisprudence of violence unexpected by those who misunderstand rule-of-law promotion as an inherently good practice.’
Laura Nader - Professor of Anthropology, University of California, Berkeley
‘Meierhenrich pulls back the veil of ignorance to show the violence embedded in the law. Meticulously and exhaustively researched and expertly analyzed, The Violence of Law is a magisterial accomplishment. Its findings go beyond the gacaca courts to question the entire transitional justice enterprise.’
Michael Barnett - University Professor of International Affairs and Political Science, George Washington University
Weaving together on-the-ground observations, political theories, photographic evidence, and historical narratives, The Violence of Law exposes how brutal effects of power can be accompanied by a narrative of victimhood, mobilizing international sympathy.’
Martha Minow - 300th Anniversary University Professor, Harvard Law School