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In times in which global governance in its various forms, such as
human rights, international trade law, and development projects, is
increasingly promoted by transnational economic actors and
international institutions that seem to be detached from democratic
processes of legitimation, the question of the relationship between
international law and empire is as topical as ever. By examining
this relationship in historical contexts from early modernity to
the present, this volume aims to deepen current understandings of
the way international legal institutions, practices, and narratives
have shaped specifically imperial ideas about and structures of
world governance. As it explores fundamental ways in which
international legal discourses have operated in colonial as well as
European contexts, the book enters a heated debate on the
involvement of the modern law of nations in imperial projects. Each
of the chapters contributes to this emerging body of scholarship by
drawing out the complexity and ambivalence of the relationship
between international law and empire. They expand on the critique
of western imperialism while acknowledging the nuances and
ambiguities of international legal discourse and, in some cases,
the possibility of counter-hegemonic claims being articulated
through the language of international law. Importantly, as the book
suggests that international legal argument may sometimes be used to
counter imperial enterprises, it maintains that international law
can barely escape the Eurocentric framework within which the
progressive aspirations of internationalism were conceived
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