This book asserts that the Pacific Islands continue to struggle
with the colonial legacy of plural legal systems, comprising laws
and legal institutions from both the common law and the customary
legal system. It also investigates the extent to which customary
principles and values are accommodated in legislation. Focusing on
Samoa, the author argues that South Pacific countries continue to
adopt a Western approach to law reform without considering legal
pluralism, which often results in laws which are unsuitable and
irrelevant to Samoa. In the context of this system of law making,
effective law reform in Samoa can only be achieved where the law
reform process recognises the legitimacy of the two primary legal
systems. The book goes on to present a law reform process that is
more relevant and suitable for law making in the Pacific Islands or
any post-colonial societies.
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