Sovereign Debt Diplomacies

Rethinking sovereign debt from colonial empires to hegemony

Juan Flores Zendejas editor Pierre Penet editor

Format:Hardback

Publisher:Oxford University Press

Published:12th Mar '21

Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back

Sovereign Debt Diplomacies cover

This is an open access title available under the terms of a CC BY-NC-ND 4.0 International licence. It is free to read at Oxford Scholarship Online and offered as a free PDF download from OUP and selected open access locations. Sovereign Debt Diplomacies aims to revisit the meaning of sovereign debt in relation to colonial history and postcolonial developments. It offers three main contributions. The first contribution is historical. The volume historicises a research field that has so far focused primarily on the post-1980 years. A focus on colonial debt from the 19th century building of colonial empires to the decolonisation era in the 1960s-70s fills an important gap in recent debt historiographies. Economic historians have engaged with colonialism only reluctantly or en passant, giving credence to the idea that colonialism is not a development that deserves to be treated on its own. This has led to suboptimal developments in recent scholarship. The second contribution adds a 'law and society' dimension to studies of debt. The analytical payoff of the exercise is to capture the current developments and functional limits of debt contracting and adjudication in relation to the long-term political and sociological dynamics of sovereignty. Finally, Sovereign Debt Diplomacies imports insights from, and contributes to the body of research currently developed in the Humanities under the label 'colonial and postcolonial studies'. The emphasis on 'history from below' and focus on 'subaltern agency' usefully complement the traditional elite-perspective on financial imperialism favoured by the British school of empire history.

This book skillfully brings sovereign debt out of the corners of wonky international finance and into the world of international studies, where diplomacy, history, and globalization intersect with government borrowing and long-term debt. * B. Roman, CHOICE *
A go-to source for innovative scholarship by the most recent generation of sovereign debt scholars ... The book very much repays reading. * Barry Eichengreen, OEconomia *
This work provides a strikingly innovative analysis of sovereign debt, by explaining why international finance is eminently political. The wide range of historical cases included here focus on the study of conflicts and disputes which demonstrate the scarcity of rules governing international lending and borrowing. The subject urgently requires reflection and action today as the volume of public debt explodes. * Carlos Marichal, Emeritus Professor of Economic History, El Colegio de México *
The editors have assembled an essential volume, which fills gaps in our understanding of sovereign debt, its place in economic history and international politics. The colonial project has malingered between the lines of contemporary sovereign debt discourse. This volume brings it to the foreground with analytical rigor and interdisciplinary creativity. It is an exceptionally sophisticated, yet accessible, examination of the debt relationship, and the commitments it extracts from both debtors and creditors over time. This perspective is particularly indispensable now, when researchers and policy makers are prone to treat China's ascendance as creditor, and the decline of international institutions dominated by the trans-Atlantic powers, as challenges without precedent in economic history. * Anna Gelpern, Professor of Law and Agnes N. Williams Research Professor, Georgetown University Law Center *

ISBN: 9780198866350

Dimensions: 242mm x 160mm x 27mm

Weight: 722g

372 pages