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Mr. Mothercountry - The Man Who Made the Rule of Law (Hardcover)
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Mr. Mothercountry - The Man Who Made the Rule of Law (Hardcover)
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Today, every continent retains elements of the legal code
distributed by the British empire. The British empire created a
legal footprint along with political, economic, cultural and racial
ones. One of the central problems of political theory is the
insurmountable gap between ideas and their realization. Keally
McBride argues that understanding the presently fraught state of
the concept of the rule of law around the globe relies upon
understanding how it was first introduced and then practiced
through colonial administration-as well as unraveling the ideas and
practices of those who instituted it. The astonishing fact of the
matter is that for thirty years, between 1814 and 1844, virtually
all of the laws in the British Empire were reviewed, approved or
discarded by one individual: James Stephen, disparagingly known as
"Mr. Mothercountry." Virtually every single act that was passed by
a colony made its way to his desk, from a levy to improve
sanitation, to an officer's pay, to laws around migration and
immigration, and tariffs on products. Stephen, great-grandfather of
Virginia Woolf, was an ardent abolitionist, and he saw his role as
a legal protector of the most dispossessed. When confronted by acts
that could not be overturned by reference to British law that he
found objectionable, he would make arguments in the name of the
"natural law" of justice and equity. He truly believed that law
could be a force for good and equity at the same time that he was
frustrated by the existence of laws that he saw as abhorrent. In
Mr. Mothercountry, McBride draws on original archival research of
the writings of Stephen and his descendants, as well as the
Macaulay family, two major lineages of legal administrators in the
British colonies, to explore the gap between the ideal of the rule
of law and the ways in which it was practiced and enforced. McBride
does this to show that there is no way of claiming that law is
always a force for good or simply an ideological cover for
oppression. It is both. Her ultimate intent is to illuminate the
failures of liberal notions of legality in the international sphere
and to trace the power disparities and historical trajectories that
have accompanied this failure. This book explores the intertwining
histories of colonial power and the idea of the rule of law, in
both the past and the present, and it asks what the historical
legacy of British Colonialism means for how different groups view
international law today.
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