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4 - The Public Law of Planet Earth

from Part II - Asserting Sovereignty, 1895–1921

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  27 October 2022

Ryan Martínez Mitchell
Affiliation:
The Chinese University of Hong Kong
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Summary

This chapter recounts China’s participation at the First Hague Conference of 1899, where the Qing Empire was a formally included but in practice highly marginalized participant, and the implications of the so-called Boxer Rebellion that also erupted in 1899, and was followed by the subsequent Eight Nation collective occupation that radically escalated nineteenth-century practices of intervention. The use of international law as a mechanism for systematically coordinating the interests of expanding Western commercial empires in non-Western spaces was now accorded quasiconstitutional status by the new treaty arrangements reconstructing the nearly collapsed Qing political authority.

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Chapter
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Recentering the World
China and the Transformation of International Law
, pp. 79 - 97
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2022

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