International Law as World Order in Late Imperial China

Translation, Reception and Discourse, 1847-1911

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This is the first systematic analysis of the early introduction and reception of international law as a Western political and legal science in China. International law in late imperial China is studied both as part of the introduction of the Western sciences and as a theoretical orientation in international affairs between 1847 and 1911. The first chapters serve the purpose of analysing the political, institutional, intellectual and linguistic process of adapting the theories of international law to the Chinese context language. The second major part of the book is dedicated to the discourse on China and world order within this framework.

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Preliminary material
著者: R. Svarverud
页码: i–x
Chapter Two. International law as discipline west and east
著者: R. Svarverud
页码: 21–67
Chapter Four. The early discourse on international law in China
著者: R. Svarverud
页码: 133–161
Bibliography
著者: R. Svarverud
页码: 303–316
Index
著者: R. Svarverud
页码: 317–322
Rune Svarverud, Ph.D. (1996), is Professor of Chinese at the Department of Culture Studies and Oriental Languages, University of Oslo. He has published widely on pre-Qin and late imperial Chinese intellectual history, including Methods of the Way: Early Chinese Ethical Thought (Brill, 1998).
All those interested in the history and language of late imperial China and in the intellectuals encounters between China and the West.
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