Rebel Courts is an exceptional book. The breadth of practice of armed groups collected, cited, and analyzed by Provost will, without a doubt, offer important insights to generations of scholars interested in rebel governance, rebel law, and rebel administration of justice. The book will also, hopefully, inspire more international lawyers to engage in fieldwork and with legal pluralism.
Alessandra Spadaro, Journal of International Humanitarian Legal Studies
Rebel Courts is a remarkable piece of academicliterature and undeniably a core addition to international legal scholarship. The strengthof the book lies in the detailed analysis of somekey armed groups' practices and a groundbreakinglegal conclusion, which encourage states andpractitioners alike to consider, in some circumstances, the validity and even legitimacy ofarmed groups justice. Not an easy recommendationto make given the (sometimes justified) badreputation, surrounding armed groups in contemporary international relations, to say the least.
Annyssa Bellal, The American Journal of International Law