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Decorum or Deterrence? The Politics of Execution in Malawi, 1915-1966

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posted on 2025-07-30, 15:04 authored by Stacey Hynd
Capital punishment - specifically public execution - is here investigated not simply as a judicial punishment, but as a lens through which to view the civil and socio-political development of Malawi from the colonial to early independence eras. Public executions were an exceptional measure, employed at times of marked social and political unrest, being ordered by the colonial government in response to the Chilembwe Uprising in 1915 and by Prime Minister Banda in 1965 in the aftermath of the Cabinet crisis and Chipembere Uprising. This article looks at the continuities and changes in the practice and signification of these judicial killings.

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This article is not the final print version. The print version is available at https://doi.org/10.2752/147800408X341640

Journal

Cultural and Social History

Publisher

Berg

Language

en

Citation

Volume 5, Number 4, pp. 437-448

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