Selecciona el PANEL | 19. Colonial Continuities in Justice, Criminological Studies and Law in Africa: Crossed Views. |
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Autor/a | Susana Santos |
Correo electrónico | Correo electrónico oculto; Se requiere Javascript. |
Título de la comunicación | Lawyers dealing with everyday life ethics in corporate legal firms in Cape Verde and Mozambique: colonial continuities, resistance and change. |
Abstrac | The development of law firms in Cape Verde and Mozambique dedicated to corporate and international projects aligns with the rapid expansion of globalized financial markets. Portuguese law firms have been using different channels and instruments – legal, economic, political, and cultural cooperation- to enter and shape these markets. One of the forms used is the training of local practitioners and the establishment of partnerships ensuring a strategy of economic and political influence that can be described as postmodern colonialism (Silbey, 1996). To answer these questions, we conducted fieldwork in Mozambique and Cabo Verde and interviewed thirteen lawyers selected from a mixed sample of Portuguese lawyers working in another jurisdiction CV and MZ: Mozambican and Cape-Verdean lawyers who studied in Portugal and Europe and practice law in their home country in a firm with a partnership or cooperation agreement; and Mozambican lawyers who studied in their home country and practice law in a firm with a partnership or cooperation agreement with a Portuguese law firm. |