Law and Colonial Cultures
Legal Regimes in World History, 1400–1900
Format:Hardback
Publisher:Cambridge University Press
Published:3rd Dec '01
Currently unavailable, and unfortunately no date known when it will be back
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- Paperback£24.99(9780521009263)
Argues that institutions and culture serve as important elements of international legal order.
Advances an interesting perspective in world history, arguing that institutions and culture serve as important elements of international order. Focusing on colonial legal politics, it uses case studies to trace a shift from the multicentric law of early empires to the state-centered law of the colonial world.Advances an interesting perspective in world history, arguing that institutions and culture - and not just the global economy - serve as important elements of international order. Focusing on colonial legal politics and the interrelation of local and indigenous cultural contests and institutional change, the book uses case studies to trace a shift in plural legal orders - from the multicentric law of early empires to the state-centered law of the colonial and postcolonial world. In the early modern world, the special legal status of cultural and religious others itself became an element of continuity across culturally diverse empires. In the nineteenth century, the state's assertion of a singular legal authority responded to repetitive legal conflicts - not simply to the imposition of Western models of governance. Indigenous subjects across time and in all settings were active in making, changing, and interpreting the law - and, by extension, in shaping the international order.
'… this book can be warmly recommended for its topicality, as well as its provocative thesis and rich detail.' The Round Table
- Winner of James Willard Hurst Prize of the Law and Society Association 2003
- Winner of World History Association Prize 2003
ISBN: 9780521804141
Dimensions: 236mm x 158mm x 25mm
Weight: 550g
300 pages