Sindiso Mnisi Weeks
Assistant Professor, School for Global Inclusion and Social Development,
University of Massachusetts Boston; and
Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Public Law,
University of Cape Town
Assistant Professor, School for Global Inclusion and Social Development,
University of Massachusetts Boston; and
Adjunct Associate Professor, Department of Public Law,
University of Cape Town
Summary
Social Justice Thinker and Scholar Activist
As a social justice thinker and scholar activist, I have so far specialised in public policy pertaining to marginalised and vulnerable groups – especially indigenous, African populations and women. My book, Access to Justice and Human Security: Cultural Contradictions in Rural South Africa (Routledge, 2018), focuses on the ways in which human (in)security and social (under)development affect access to justice and the management of social conflict in highly volatile, remote communities subject to "cooperative governance" arrangements between traditional leaders and the state in South Africa.
Building on conceptual curiosities seeded by findings in my prior work, my latest project follows two distinct but complementary tracks that make new theoretical and methodological contributions to the study of rights, justice, and security – among the most fundamental subjects in law and society. The first track uses ethnographic, historical, sociolinguistic, and philosophical methods to develop theory on law and society grounded in the languages and experiences of black South Africans (and, more broadly, Africans in general). The second track is methodological, interrogating the viability of not just “critical” but “antiracist” ethnography in the study of law and society. Together, the two tracks push scholars of law and society to reconsider existing theory on (or what we know about) rights, justice and security, and how we (claim to) know it, as well as the (re)form and (re)development of law and society in today’s global political economy. The project attempts to simultaneously transform processes of knowledge production – at least, where we start from and who is included therein – and, hence, the content of knowledge produced.
In the past, I have done research on women's inheritance, land rights, traditional governance, traditional courts and conflict between indigenous and state laws in South Africa. Methods of greatest interest to me, and thus regularly used in my work, include ethnography, community-based participatory action-research, discourse analysis and comparative epistemology. I have received several awards and fellowships for this work, including a high (peer review-based) rating from the National Research Foundation in South Africa; published widely in peer-reviewed journals and edited volumes, including contributing several chapters to a textbook published by Oxford University Press Southern Africa on African Customary Law in South Africa; and regularly contribute to popular media, including via the social/racial justice blog I keep with my husband, Daniel Weeks, at sindisoanddan.wordpress.com. My highest qualifications are in the interdisciplinary field of law and society (also known as socio-legal studies), with my being jointly trained as a legal, social and cultural anthropologist, legal sociologist and human rights lawyer. Both my master's and doctorate were earned while I was a Rhodes Scholar at the Centre for Socio-Legal Studies, University of Oxford.
You can follow me @SindisoMW, reluctant social media user though you will see that I am.Experience
University of Massachusetts Amherst
Adjunct Professor / Lecturer,
Sep 2013 – Aug 2014
Legal Studies Program, Department of Political Science:taught "Law and Society in Africa".University of New Hampshire School of Law
Resident Scholar,
Sep 2013 – Jul 2014
Writing fellowship for completion of book manuscript: Access to Justice and Human Security.University of Oxford
Candidate for DPhil in Law, Oct 2005 – Aug 2009
Centre for Law and Society: Conducted research on the ‘The Interface between Living Customary Law(s) of Succession and South African State Law’.Constitutional Court of South Africa
Law Clerk,
Jan 2005 – Jul 2005
Researcher to the Deputy Chief Justice, Dikgang Moseneke.
- Current Projects
These are some of the projects I am presently working on.
Dis/Empowering Rights Paradox
in South Africa's Legal Culture
My recent work has included a focus on the ways in which rights can have paradoxical consequences in the everyday circumstances of those who lead precarious lives due to their economic, social and political exclusion. I presented my working paper, "Disempowering Rights: The Unintended Consequences of Rights Discourse(s) in South Africa's Legal Culture Clash", at the Harvard African Studies Workshop (organised by Profs. John and Jean Comaroff) on March 5th, 2018, with Prof. Lucie White serving as discussant.
You can find further details of the event here.
Access to Justice and Human Security
(Routledge, 2018)
The South African Research Chairs Initiative (SARChI) in Security and Justice, Centre for Law and Society, and Land and Accountability Research Centre at the University of Cape Town hosted a conversation between myself, Former Chairperson of Commission on Gender Equality of South Africa and Senior Research Associate, Centre for Law and Society, Faculty of Law, University of Cape Town (South Africa), Nomboniso Gasa, and Professor of Criminology, School of Sociology and Social Policy, Faculty of Social Sciences, University of Nottingham (United Kingdom), Bill Dixon, on what models of access to justice that consider human insecurity could look like in rural South Africa.
Boston Human Rights City Initiative
School for Global Inclusion and Social Development students and my colleague, Dr. Gillian MacNaughton and myself, discuss the Boston Human Rights City Initiative and other cities participating in the National Human Rights Cities Alliance. The goal of the Initiative is to leverage the Boston Human Rights City resolution to build a culture of human rights in the City of Boston.
The Initiative is comprised of a network of community-based organizations, academics, students and other individuals dedicated to implementing the resolution. The first meeting of the Initiative was held on April 27, 2017, at the School for Global Inclusion and Social Development, at which time a nine-member steering committee was formed. Learn more about this ongoing project here.
Academic PublicationsI have published several academic articles and book chapters, as well as contributed to a widely used textbook on African Customary Law in South Africa.
You can purchase this innovative textbook, African Customary Law in South Africa: Post-Apartheid and Living Law Perspectives (OUPSA, 2015), from Oxford University Press or Amazon. You can also download some of my journal articles here.
Challenging Oppressive LegislationWhile I was a senior researcher at the Law, Race and Gender Unit (now Centre for Law and Society) at the University of Cape Town, I worked with colleagues, the Legal Resources Centre and local community-based organisations to ensure that people living in rural villages would have an opportunity to speak out against the proposed passage of the controversial Traditional Courts Bill, which legal experts consider unconstitutional. Our collaborative efforts ultimately led to the Traditional Courts Bill lapsing in parliament and not being passed. This work is ongoing as the improved Traditional Courts Bill of 2017 proved vulnerable in August 2018 to Parliament's amending it to make its content just as bad as the 2008/2012 Bill.
This video describes our efforts on this issue. It was produced, shot and edited by Nawaal Deane and directed by myself. You can also listen to a podcast on the same subject here.
Public Education and Social Justice Activism
I have written numerous articles for publication in popular media sources, challenging law and society on a range of topics, and conducted a number of media interviews.
You can find these together here and in the News Archive below.
WHAT I BELIEVE IN
"Justice is what love looks like in public."– Cornell WestEducation
University of Oxford
Law (Socio-Legal Studies), DPhil / PhD, 2007–2009
Oxford was the first University in the English-speaking world. It has more than 22,000 students. 41 per cent of its academic staff, and one third of its students, are citizens of countries outside the UK.
University of Oxford
Legal Research (Socio-Legal Studies), MSt / MPhil, 2005–2006Oxford was the first University in the English-speaking world. It has more than 22,000 students. 41 per cent of its academic staff, and one third of its students, are citizens of countries outside the UK.
University of Cape Town
Law, LLB / J.D., 2003–2004
The University of Cape Town is a public research university located in Cape Town in the Western Cape province of South Africa. UCT was founded in 1829 as the South African College, and is the oldest university in South Africa and the second oldest extant university in Africa. The language of instruction is English.University of Cape Town
Law, Philosophy and Language, BA, 2000–2002
The University of Cape Town is a public research university located in Cape Town in the Western Cape province of South Africa. UCT was founded in 1829 as the South African College, and is the oldest university in South Africa and the second oldest extant university in Africa. The language of instruction is English.Skills
Culture
Gender
Human Rights
South African Constitutional Law
South African Customary Law
Indigenous Rights
Policy Analysis and Reform
Ethnography
Community-Based Participatory Action Research
Dispute Management
Advocacy
Media
My News
Welcome to the news section! You'll find some of my professional updates linked below.
For up to date information on what I have been up to, please refer to the current projects listed above
or the twitter feed down below.
August 15, 2020July 19, 2020August 28, 2019More PostsSocial Feed @SindisoMW
Check out my social media updates!
Contact me!