South Asia, the British Empire, and the Rise of Classical Legal Thought : Towards a Historical Ontology of the Law
Book Details
Format
Hardback or Cased Book
ISBN-10
0198916485
ISBN-13
9780198916482
Publisher
Oxford University Press
Imprint
Oxford University Press
Country of Manufacture
GB
Country of Publication
GB
Publication Date
Aug 29th, 2024
Print length
560 Pages
Weight
826 grams
Dimensions
14.60 x 22.30 x 3.60 cms
Ksh 25,400.00
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The book delves into colonial South Asia's legal transformation under the rule of the British Crown, examining shifts in sovereignty, land control, and justice influenced by classical legal thought. It explores two key discourses, doctrinal and ordinary language, shaping the concept of 'the law.'
This book considers the legal history of colonial rule in South Asia from 1757 to the early 20th century. It traces a shift in the conceptualization of sovereignty, land control, and adjudicatory rectification, arguing that under the East India Company the focus was on ''the laws'' factoring into the administration of justice more than ''the law'' as an infinitely generative norm system. This accompanied a discourse about rendering property ''absolute'' defined in terms of a certainty of controlling land''s rent-and made administrable mainly as a duty of revenue payment—rather than any right of ostensibly physical dominion. Leaving property external to its ontology of ''the laws,'' the Company''s regime thus differed significantly from its counterparts in the Anglo-common-law mainstream, where an ostensibly unitary, physical, and disaggregable notion of the property right was becoming a stand in for a notion of legal right in general already by the late 18th century. Only after 1858, under Crown rule, did conditions in the subcontinent ripen for ''the law'' to emerge as a purportedly free-standing institutional fact. A key but neglected factor in this transformation was the rise of classical legal thought, which finally enabled property''s internalization into ''the law'' and underwrote status and contract becoming the other key elements of the Raj''s new legal ontology. Formulating a historical ontological approach to jurisprudence, the book deploys a running distinction between the doctrinal discourse of (the) law and ordinary-language discourse about (the) law that carries implications for legal theory well beyond South Asia.
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