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Dec 8, 2025 | arts and humanities

About this episode

Research from Assistant Professor Ligeia Quackelbeen at Tilburg University examines how international criminal courts categorize cultural practices such as forced marriage, revealing issues with current legal approaches. Using a landmark case as a primary example, the analysis demonstrates how judges rely on rigid checklist-based reasoning that fails to adequately consider cultural contexts. The research examines the benefits of adopting prototype theory from cognitive science to enable more culturally sensitive legal interpretations that better understand local practices rather than applying generic Western-centered definitions. More

Original article reference

This SciPod is a summary of ‘In Search of the Prototype of Forced Marriage: The Ongwen Case and the Bush Wives Phenomenon’ in the Journal of International Criminal Justice, https://doi.org/10.1093/jicj/mqae023.

Contact

For further information, you can connect with Professor Ligeia Quackelbeen at L.S.C.Quackelbeen@tilburguniversity.edu or via: Ligeia Quackelbeen | LinkedIn

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