Description

Book Synopsis
Law across imperial borders offers new perspectives on the complex legal connections between Britain’s presence in Western China in the western frontier regions of Yunnan and Xinjiang, and the British colonies of Burma and India. Bringing together a transnational methodology with a social-legal focus, it demonstrates how inter-Asian mobility across frontiers shaped British authority in contested frontier regions of China. It examines the role of a range of actors who helped create, constitute and contest legal practice on the frontier–including consuls, indigenous elites and cultural mediators. The book will be of interest to historians of China, the British Empire in Asia and legal history.

Table of Contents

List of figures
Acknowledgements
Abbreviations
Note on transliteration
List of British representatives in Kashgar
List of Tengyue consuls

Introduction

Part I: The Burma-China frontier
1 Treaty-making and treaty-breaking: transfrontier salt and opium, 1904–11
2 On the move: people crossing the frontier, 1911–25
3 Consuls and Frontier Meetings, 1909–35

Part II: Through the mountains and across the desert: Xinjiang
4 Isolation and connection: law between semicolonial China and the Raj
5 Administering justice and mediating local custom
6 The British end game in Xinjiang: the decline of consular rights, 1917–39

Conclusion

Key terms
Select bibliography
Index

Law Across Imperial Borders: British Consuls and

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    A Hardback by Emily Whewell

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      Publisher: Manchester University Press
      Publication Date: 19/12/2019
      ISBN13: 9781526140029, 978-1526140029
      ISBN10: 1526140020

      Description

      Book Synopsis
      Law across imperial borders offers new perspectives on the complex legal connections between Britain’s presence in Western China in the western frontier regions of Yunnan and Xinjiang, and the British colonies of Burma and India. Bringing together a transnational methodology with a social-legal focus, it demonstrates how inter-Asian mobility across frontiers shaped British authority in contested frontier regions of China. It examines the role of a range of actors who helped create, constitute and contest legal practice on the frontier–including consuls, indigenous elites and cultural mediators. The book will be of interest to historians of China, the British Empire in Asia and legal history.

      Table of Contents

      List of figures
      Acknowledgements
      Abbreviations
      Note on transliteration
      List of British representatives in Kashgar
      List of Tengyue consuls

      Introduction

      Part I: The Burma-China frontier
      1 Treaty-making and treaty-breaking: transfrontier salt and opium, 1904–11
      2 On the move: people crossing the frontier, 1911–25
      3 Consuls and Frontier Meetings, 1909–35

      Part II: Through the mountains and across the desert: Xinjiang
      4 Isolation and connection: law between semicolonial China and the Raj
      5 Administering justice and mediating local custom
      6 The British end game in Xinjiang: the decline of consular rights, 1917–39

      Conclusion

      Key terms
      Select bibliography
      Index

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