The Extraterritoriality of Law: History, Theory, Politics
In: Politics of Transnational Law Ser.
Cover -- Half Title -- Series Page -- Title -- Copyright -- Contents -- List of contributors -- Introduction -- PART I What is extraterritoriality? -- 1 Ways of doing extraterritoriality in scholarship -- 2 In the middle of nowhere: the futile quest to distinguish territoriality from extraterritoriality -- 3 Moving beyond the e-word in the Anthropocene -- PART II Constituting and contesting extraterritoriality -- 4 Early modern extraterritoriality, diplomacy, and the transition to capitalism -- 5 'Uneven empires': extraterritoriality and the early trading companies -- 6 Protégé problems: Qing officials, extraterritoriality, and global integration in nineteenth-century China -- 7 Drinking water by the sea: real and unreal property in the mixed courts of Egypt -- 8 'And the laws are rude . . . crude and uncertain': extraterritoriality and the emergence of territorialised statehood in Siam -- 9 Imperial reorderings in US zones and regulatory regimes, 1934-50 -- PART III Extraterritoriality in the contemporary world-system -- 10 The interplay between extraterritoriality, sovereignty, and the foundations of international law -- 11 Extraterritoriality as an analytic lens: examining the global governance of transnational bribery and corruption -- 12 From extraterritorial jurisdiction to sovereignty: the annexation of Palestine -- 13 Extraterritoriality reconsidered: functional boundaries as repositories of jurisdiction -- Index.