Architecture of Denial: Imperial Violence, the Construction of Law and Historical Knowledge during the Mau Mau Uprising, 1952–1960
Date
2022
Authors
Journal Title
Journal ISSN
Volume Title
Publisher
African Journal of Legal Studies
Abstract
In 2013, the UK government settled a class action suit, which alleged that the British.
The Colonial Government had subjected Kenyans to detainment, ill-treatment, and torture during the 1952–1960 ‘Kenya Emergency’. During the trial proceedings, the
efforts of three expert historical witnesses for the prosecution – Caroline Elkins,
David Anderson and Huw Bennett – led to the discovery of a cache of over 8,000 his torical files from 36 former British colonies. The material contained within these documents suggested not only that Britain was aware of pervasive human rights abuses
occurring throughout Kenya during the Emergency, but the use of such violence
was endorsed and systematically regulated at the highest levels of the colonial
administration. Drawing on Foucault’s conception of historical archives as ‘systems
of discursivity’, and making use of the testimonies of the three experts, this article
explores how the British Colonial Administration was able to dominate the discursive space surrounding Kenyan law and Mau Mau identity, allowing both to justify the
implementation of systemic violence throughout the Emergency, and to evade legal
responsibility for these abuses at the time, and for decades afterward.
Description
Research Article
Keywords
Hanslope Disclosure, colonial violence, alternative narrative, moral culpability, Colonial Administration, legal responsibility