Tom Vogt: Notes from Africa: The Rule of Law I

Tom Vogt is the Director of the NanoCenter at the University of South Carolina. He is spending three weeks this summer at the African University of Science & Technology in Abuja, Nigeria teaching a 3 weeks course called "Introduction to Materials Chemistry". The original post can be found at his blog Tom Vogt nano and technology blog
However, if legal recourse is not possible because laws will not be used then a severe dissolution of the social fabric occurs which has a very corrosive effect on the behavior of individuals which no longer feel bound by law. In modern western societies emerging behavior needs to be constrained to protect agreed upon common goods and fellow citizens. Therefore we confine smokers to certain areas, insist on hands-free use of cell phones and prohibit texting while driving. These are examples of how law needs to continuously adapt to social and behavioral changes caused by technological and politico-cultural changes.
What strikes me in African and Asian countries I've visited is the other side of the medal: how often technological and political changes are impeded by not having or applying existing laws which promote social behavior at the cost of limited individual gains. A constant "tragedy of commons" is being played and everybody loses. Trash is left in public places and common good is given no value. This is a disturbing metaphor which describes a lot of social and political phenomena here in Nigeria. The implementation of technologies within societies without the rule of law transforms the character of technologies from tools of change and progress into instruments of power and support for the status quo. Furthermore, the cultural price that is being paid is a high one: once ignored law becomes very difficult to insist on and respect. It might even call for draconian measures to turn the tides and force compliance with existing rules regulating social interactions and behaviors such as parking, traffic rules and garbage disposal. While we enforce fines and use tickets to induce behavioral changes albeit it begrudgingly, an inefficient and corrupt bureaucracy no longer has this tool. What remains are immediate and draconian punishment. I found this sign in a government parking lot in Abuja. We would probably argue that a parking violation does not warrant deflating tires and violates the principle of proportionality of crime and punishment. However, the erosion of political and social capital in countries like Nigeria often results in an unreasonable escalation of punishment. Enforcing civil behavior using harsh punishment results in even more resentment towards law enforcement and fuels this spiral of mistrust ultimately leading to even less rule of the law.
| Organizations | NanoCenter at University of SC |
|---|---|
| Source | NanoCenter at University of SC |
| Submitter | Tom Vogt |
| Tags | Innovation |
Related Posts
- Upstate Pharmacy School Launches Center for Entrepreneurial Development
- Earn a Clemson MBA and launch your own company, all in the same year
- Lessons from the Antiques Road Show About How Entrepreneurs Should Tell Stories
- InnoVenture 2012 Call for Presenters
- PDMA Carolinas - Rapid Prototyping: Now and Tomorrow - February 28
