2015
DOI: 10.1111/lasr.12138
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Work Rules: How International NGOs Build Law in War-Torn Societies

Abstract: Drawing on socio‐legal literature and fieldwork in South Sudan, this article argues that international aid groups operating in conflict settings create and impose a rules‐based order on the local people they hire and on the domestic organizations they fund. Civil society actors in these places experience law's soft power through their daily, tangible, and mundane contact with aid agencies. As employees they are subject to contracts and other rules of employment, work under management and finance teams, documen… Show more

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Cited by 37 publications
(12 citation statements)
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“…I used two residents to assist me in tracking down individuals who had either been referred to in previous interviews or from incidents that I had read about in the media. I utilized a snowball approach with my initial analysis determining where to go, and what to look for, in my next round of interviews (Massoud ). Since most incidents of “mob justice” took place in informal settlements I shifted my focus to these locations.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…I used two residents to assist me in tracking down individuals who had either been referred to in previous interviews or from incidents that I had read about in the media. I utilized a snowball approach with my initial analysis determining where to go, and what to look for, in my next round of interviews (Massoud ). Since most incidents of “mob justice” took place in informal settlements I shifted my focus to these locations.…”
Section: Methodsmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…They not only lack cultural resonance (Engel ), but they could also attract backlash (Currier ; Kollman and Waites ) and jeopardize local activists. Engrossed in fulfilling donor conditions, human rights organizations eventually neglect local objectives (Massoud ) and fail to empower their target population (Swidler ), or lose legitimacy (Mutua ).…”
Section: Human Rights Activism and Micromobilizationmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…But the process of understanding who the actors are, how their strategies change over time, whom they purport to assist with the rule‐of‐law ideal, and why they engage in these programs are important ethnographic sources of sociolegal scholarship and social policy. Building the rule‐of‐law ideal, for activists in Sudan and elsewhere, is shaped by daily practices, which may at times be as routine as submitting job applications, signing employment contracts, attending weekly staff meetings, and adding field codes into a spreadsheet (Massoud 2015).…”
Section: Studying Rule‐of‐law Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%
“…It may reveal how the rule of law augments the power of persons or groups—including lawyers, judges, religious leaders, and foreign aid donors—deemed to be the expositors of the law, and the contests of power between them. Investigating the rule of law from the perspective of the most impoverished or marginalized may also facilitate the study of gaps in the rule of law's reach, and it may reveal both law's ability to coerce and law's soft power—its “capacity to reframe political conflict and structure ongoing relationships” (Massoud 2015, 335).…”
Section: Studying Rule‐of‐law Practicesmentioning
confidence: 99%