Description

Book Synopsis


Table of Contents

1. Foreword, by Kent F. Schull and Robert Zens
2. Introduction, by Lâle Can and Michael Christopher Low
3. Freeing "The Enslaved People of Islam": The Changing Meaning of Ottoman Subjecthood for Captives in the Russian Empire, by Will Smiley
4. The Well-Defended Domains: Eurocentric International Law and the Making of the Ottoman Office of Legal Counsel, by Aimee M. Genell
5. What Ottoman Nationality Was and Was Not, by Will Hanley
6. Unfurling the Flag of Extraterritoriality: Autonomy, Foreign Muslims, and the Capitulations in the Ottoman Hijaz, by Michael Christopher Low
7. The Protection Question: Central Asians and Extraterritoriality in the Late Ottoman Empire, by Lâle Can
8. An Uncertain Inheritance: The Imperial Travels of Legal Migrants, from British India to Ottomon Iraq, by Julia Stephens
9. The British-Ottoman Cold War, c. 1880–1914: Imperial Struggles over Muslim Mobility and Citizenship from the Suez Canalto the Durand Line, by Faiz Ahmed
10. Pan-Islamic Propagandists or Professional Diplomats? The Ottoman Consular Establishment in the Colonial Indian Ocean, by Jeffrey Dyer
11. Travel Documents, Mobility Control, and the Ottoman State in an Age of Global Migration, 1880–1915, by David Gutman
12. "Claimed by Turkey as Subjects": Ottoman Migrants, Foreign Passports, and Syrian Nationality in the Americas, 1915–1925, by Stacy D. Fahrenthold
13. Afterword: Ottoman International Law?, by Umut Özsu
14. Select Bibliography
15. Contributors
16. Index

The Subjects of Ottoman International Law

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A Paperback / softback by Lâle Can, Michael Christopher Low, Kent F. Schull

15 in stock


    View other formats and editions of The Subjects of Ottoman International Law by Lâle Can

    Publisher: Indiana University Press
    Publication Date: 13/10/2020
    ISBN13: 9780253056610, 978-0253056610
    ISBN10: 0253056616

    Description

    Book Synopsis


    Table of Contents

    1. Foreword, by Kent F. Schull and Robert Zens
    2. Introduction, by Lâle Can and Michael Christopher Low
    3. Freeing "The Enslaved People of Islam": The Changing Meaning of Ottoman Subjecthood for Captives in the Russian Empire, by Will Smiley
    4. The Well-Defended Domains: Eurocentric International Law and the Making of the Ottoman Office of Legal Counsel, by Aimee M. Genell
    5. What Ottoman Nationality Was and Was Not, by Will Hanley
    6. Unfurling the Flag of Extraterritoriality: Autonomy, Foreign Muslims, and the Capitulations in the Ottoman Hijaz, by Michael Christopher Low
    7. The Protection Question: Central Asians and Extraterritoriality in the Late Ottoman Empire, by Lâle Can
    8. An Uncertain Inheritance: The Imperial Travels of Legal Migrants, from British India to Ottomon Iraq, by Julia Stephens
    9. The British-Ottoman Cold War, c. 1880–1914: Imperial Struggles over Muslim Mobility and Citizenship from the Suez Canalto the Durand Line, by Faiz Ahmed
    10. Pan-Islamic Propagandists or Professional Diplomats? The Ottoman Consular Establishment in the Colonial Indian Ocean, by Jeffrey Dyer
    11. Travel Documents, Mobility Control, and the Ottoman State in an Age of Global Migration, 1880–1915, by David Gutman
    12. "Claimed by Turkey as Subjects": Ottoman Migrants, Foreign Passports, and Syrian Nationality in the Americas, 1915–1925, by Stacy D. Fahrenthold
    13. Afterword: Ottoman International Law?, by Umut Özsu
    14. Select Bibliography
    15. Contributors
    16. Index

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