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Ifugao Law / (In American Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 15, No. 1) cover

Ifugao Law / (In American Archaeology and Ethnology, Vol. 15, No. 1)

Chapter 42: The Principal Crimes and their Frequency
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About This Book

The study describes a customary legal system governed by communal norms, taboos, and religious practice, explaining how law is learned, applied, and enforced. It outlines family law including marriage forms, bridewealth, adoption, divorce, and inheritance rules. Property arrangements are examined with attention to rice terraces, forest lands, heirlooms, and tenure systems. Penal provisions and sanctions are detailed, from fines and capital punishment to penalties for sorcery, homicide, theft, and sexual offenses. Procedures for resolving disputes are analyzed, including intermediaries, testimony practices, ordeals, and collective enforcement such as seizure, retaliation, and truce-making. The work links legal customs to ritual peace-making and discusses effects of social change on customary authority.

The Principal Crimes and their Frequency

90. List of offenses.—In the Kiangan-Nagakaran-Maggok area, the principal crimes, in order of their probable frequency, are: sorcery; adultery; theft; murder (or in the case of women and children, kidnapping); the putting of an innocent person in the position of being considered an accessory to crime; manslaughter; rape of a married woman; arson; incest. Minor crimes are: insult; slander; false accusation; rape of a girl.