Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-t7czq Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-29T19:03:10.201Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  15 October 2020

Maïa Pal
Affiliation:
Oxford Brookes University
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Jurisdictional Accumulation
An Early Modern History of Law, Empires, and Capital
, pp. 302 - 337
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2020

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Adair, E. R. 1929, The Exterritoriality of Ambassadors in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries, New York: Longmans, Green and Co.Google Scholar
Adorno, R. 2012, ‘Court and Chronicle: A Native Andean’s Engagement with Spanish Colonial Law’, in Belmessous, S. (ed.), Native Claims: Indigenous Law against Empire 1500–1920, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 6384Google Scholar
Adams, J. 2007, The Familial State: Ruling Families and Merchant Capitalism in Early Modern Europe, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University PressGoogle Scholar
Adams, R. & Cox, R. (eds.) 2011, Diplomacy and Early Modern Culture, Basingstoke: PalgraveGoogle Scholar
Aglietti, M., Herrero Sanchez, M., & Zamora Rodriguez, F. (eds.) 2013, Los cónsules de extranjeros en la Edad Moderna y a principios de la Edad Contemporánea, Madrid: Ediciones Doce CallesGoogle Scholar
Alexandrowicz, C. H. 1967, An Introduction to the History of the Law of Nations in the East Indies (16th, 17th and 18th Centuries), Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Allain, T. 2018, ‘Relations de pouvoir et enjeux marchands autour du réseau consulaire néerlandais en Méditerranée (XVII–XVIIIe siècles)’, in Bartolomei, A., Calafat, G., Grenet, M., & Ulbert, J. (eds.), De l’utilité commerciale des consuls: L’institution consulaire et les marchands dans le monde méditerranéen (XVIIe–XXe siècle), Rome: Publications de l’École française de Rome, 421438Google Scholar
Alston, D. 2018, ‘Scottish Slave Owners in Suriname 1651–1863Northern Scotland, 9, 1743Google Scholar
Amir, M. & Sela, R. 2016, Extraterritorialities in Occupied Worlds, Puctum BooksGoogle Scholar
Amirell, S. E. & Müller, L. (eds.) 2014, Persistent Piracy: Maritime Violence and State-Formation in Global Historical Perspective, New York: PalgraveGoogle Scholar
Anderson, M. S. 1993, The Rise of Modern Diplomacy 1450–1919, New York: LongmansGoogle Scholar
Anderson, P. 1974, Lineages of the Absolutist State, London: NLBGoogle Scholar
Anderson, S. P. 1989, An English Consul in Turkey: Paul Rycaut at Smyrna, 1667–1678, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Anghie, A. 1999, ‘Finding the Peripheries: Sovereignty and Colonialism in 19th Century International Law’, Harvard International Law Journal, 40(1), 180Google Scholar
Anghie, A. 2005, Imperialism, Sovereignty and the Making of International Law, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Anievas, A. (ed.) 2010, Marxism and World Politics: Contesting Global Capitalism, London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Anievas, A. & Matin, K. (eds.) 2016, Historical Sociology and World History: Uneven and Combined Development over the Longue Durée, Lanham, MD: Rowman & LittlefieldGoogle Scholar
Anievas, A. & Nişancioğlu, K. 2015, How the West Came to Rule: The Geopolitical Origins of Capitalism, London: PlutoGoogle Scholar
Ariste, P. 1667, Traicté des consulz de la nation françoise aux paÿs estrangersGoogle Scholar
Armitage, D. 2000, The Ideological Origins of the British Empire, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Aron, R. 1986, History, Truth and Liberty: Selected Writings, Chicago: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Armitage, D. & Pitts, J. (eds.) 2016, C. H. Alexandrowicz, The Law of Nations in Global History, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Armstrong, D., Farell, T., & Lambert, H. 2007, International Law and International Relations, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Arrighi, G. 2002 [1994] The Long Twentieth Century: Money, Power, and the Origins of Our Time, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
d’Aspremont, J. 2019, ‘Critical Histories of International Law and the Repression of Disciplinary Imagination’, London Review of International Law, 7(1), 89115Google Scholar
Aston, T. H. & Philpin, C. H. E. (eds.) 1985, The Brenner Debate: Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe, Cambridge: Cambridge University pressGoogle Scholar
Baars, G. 2019, The Corporation, Law and Capitalism: A Radical Perspective on the Role of Law in the Global Political Economy, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Baber, R. J. 2012, ‘Law, Land and Legal Rhetoric in Colonial New Spain: A Look at the Changing Rhetoric of Indigenous Americans in the Sixteenth Century’, in Belmessous, S. (ed.), Native Claims: Indigenous Law against Empire 1500–1920, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 4162Google Scholar
Bachand, R. & Lapointe, T. 2010Beyond Presentism: Rethinking the Enduring Co-Constitutive Relationships between International Law and International Relations’, International Political Sociology, 4, 271286Google Scholar
Baillou, J. (ed.) 1984, Les affaires étrangères et le corps diplomatique français, I: de l’Ancien Régime au Second Empire, Paris: Editions du CNRSGoogle Scholar
Banaji, J. 2007, ‘Islam, the Mediterranean and the Rise of Capitalism’, Historical Materialism, 15(1), 4774Google Scholar
Banaji, J. 2011, Theory as History: Essays on Modes of Production and Exploitation, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Banaji, J. 2018, ‘Globalising the History of Capital: Ways Forward’, Historical Materialism, 26(3), 143166Google Scholar
Banaji, J. 2019, ‘State and Capital in the Era of Primitive Accumulation’, keynote lecture for conference ‘IISG towards a Global History of Primitive Accumulation’, Amsterdam, 6 May 2019, unpublished paper, www.academia.edu/39761764/State_and_Capital_in_the_Era_of_Primitive_Accumulation [accessed 28 October 2019]Google Scholar
Banaji, J. forthcoming, ‘Merchant Capitalism’, in Farris, S. R., Skeggs, B., & Toscano, A. (eds.), The SAGE Handbook of MarxismGoogle Scholar
Barbano, M. 2018, ‘A Lucrative, Dangerous Business” Le consulat anglais à Alger, Tunis et Tripoli dans la deuxième moitié du XVIIe siècle’, in Bartolomei, A., Calafat, G., Grenet, M., & Ulbert, J. (eds.), De l’utilité commerciale des consuls: L’institution consulaire et les marchands dans le monde méditerranéen (XVIIe–XXe siècle), Rome: Publications de l’École française de Rome, 253263Google Scholar
Barbour, V. 1928Consular Service in the Reign of Charles II’, American Historical Review, 33, 553578.Google Scholar
Barreto, M. J. 2017, ‘Jus Gentium and the Transformation of Latin American Nature: One More Reading of Vitoria?’, in Koskenniemi, M., Rech, W., & Jimenez Fonseca, M. (eds.), International Law and Empire: Historical Explorations, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 123148Google Scholar
Bartelson, J. 1995, A Genealogy of Sovereignty, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Bartolomei, A. 2018a, ‘Introduction’, in Bartolomei, A., Calafat, G., Grenet, M., & Ulbert, J. (eds.), De l’utilité commerciale des consuls: L’institution consulaire et les marchands dans le monde méditerranéen (XVIIe–XXe siècle), Rome: Publications de l’École française de Rome, 116Google Scholar
Bartolomei, A. 2018b, ‘Entre l’état, les intérêts marchands et l’intérêt personnel, l’agence des consuls. Introduction’, in Bartolomei, A., Calafat, G., Grenet, M., & Ulbert, J. (eds.), De l’utilité commerciale des consuls: L’institution consulaire et les marchands dans le monde méditerranéen (XVIIe–XXe siècle), Rome: Publications de l’École française de Rome, 391402Google Scholar
Bartolomei, A., Calafat, G., Grenet, M., & Ulbert, J. (eds.) 2018, De l’utilité commerciale des consuls: L’institution consulaire et les marchands dans le monde méditerranéen (XVIIe–XXe siècle), Rome: Publications de l’École française de RomeGoogle Scholar
Beaulac, S. 2004, The Power of Language in the Making of International Law, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Beik, W. 1985, Absolutism and Society in Seventeenth-Century France: State Power and Provincial Aristocracy in Languedoc, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Beik, W. 2000, Louis XIV and Absolutism: A Brief Study with Documents, Boston, MA: Bedford/St Martin’sGoogle Scholar
Beik, W. 2005, ‘Review Article: The Absolutism of Louis XIV as Social Collaboration’, Past and Present, 188 (August), 195–224Google Scholar
Beik, W. 2009, A Social and Cultural History of Early Modern France, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Belissa, M. 1998, Fraternité Universelle et Intérêt National (1713–1795): Les cosmopolitiques du droit des gens, Paris: Éditions KiméGoogle Scholar
Bell, G. M. 1990, A Handlist of British Diplomatic Representatives 1509–1688, London: Royal Historical SocietyGoogle Scholar
Bell, D. A. 1994, Lawyers and Citizens: The Making of a Political Elite in Old Regime France, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Belmessous, S. (ed.) 2012, Native Claims: Indigenous Law against Empire 1500–1920, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Belmessous, S. (ed.) 2015, Empire by Treaty: Negotiation European Expansion 1600–1900, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Bély, L. 1990, Espions et ambassadeurs au temps de Louis XIV, Paris: FayardGoogle Scholar
Bély, L. 2005, ‘Les temps modernes (1515–1789)’, in Autrand, F. et al. (eds.), Histoire de la diplomatie française I. Du Moyen Age à l’Empire, Paris: Perrin, 181460Google Scholar
Bély, L. 2007, L’art de la paix en Europe: Naissance de la diplomatie moderne, XVIe–XVIIIe siècle, Paris: Presses Universitaires de FranceGoogle Scholar
Bénazet, C. 1982, Ambassadeurs et Ministres de France de 1748 à 1791. Étude institutionnelle et sociale, Thèse de l’École des ChartesGoogle Scholar
Bénazet-Béchu, C. 1998, ‘Les ambassadeurs français au XVIIIe siècle’, in Bély, L. & Richefort, I. (eds.), L’invention de la diplomatie, Paris: Presses Universitaires de FranceGoogle Scholar
Benton, L. 2002, Law and Colonial Cultures: Legal Regimes in World History, 1400–1900, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Benton, L. 2006, ‘Constitutions and Empire: A Review’, Law and Social Enquiry, 177–198Google Scholar
Benton, L. 2010, A Search for Sovereignty: Law and Geography in European Empires 1400–1900, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Benton, L. 2011, ‘Possessing Empire: Iberian Claims and Interpolity Law’, in Belmessous, S. (ed.), Native Claims: Indigenous Law against Empire 1500–1920, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1940Google Scholar
Benton, L. 2018, ‘Afterward: The Space of Political Community and the Space of Authority’, Global Intellectual History, 3(2), 254265CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Benton, L. 2019, ‘Beyond Anachronism: Histories of International Law and Global Legal Politics’, Journal of the History of International Law/Revue d’histoire du droit international, 21(1), 740Google Scholar
Benton, L. & Clulow, A. 2017, ‘Webs of Protection and Interpolity Zones in the Early Modern World’, in Benton, L., Clulow, A., & Attwood, B. (eds.), Protection and Empire: A Global History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 4971Google Scholar
Benton, L., Clulow, A., & Attwood, B. (eds.), 2017, Protection and Empire: A Global History, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Benton, L. & Ford, L. 2016 Rage for Order: The British Empire and the Origins of International Law, 1800–1850, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Benton, L. & Ross, R. J. (eds.) 2013, Legal Pluralism and Empires, 1500–1850, New York: New York University PressGoogle Scholar
Berman, H. J. 1983, Law and Revolution, Cambridge, MA: Harvard UniversityGoogle Scholar
Berridge, G. R., 2009, British Diplomacy in Turkey, 1583 to the Present, Leiden: Martinus NijhoffGoogle Scholar
Besson, S. 2012, ‘The Extraterritoriality of the European Convention on Human Rights: Why Human Rights Depend on Jurisdiction and What Jurisdiction Amounts to’, Leiden Journal of International Law, 24(4), 857884Google Scholar
Bhambra, G. 2007, Rethinking Modernity: Postcolonialism and the Sociological Imagination, Houndmills, UK: Palgrave MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Bhambra, G. 2010, ‘Historical Sociology, Modernity, and Postcolonial Critique’, American Historical Review, 116(3), 653662Google Scholar
Biedermann, Z. 2014, The Portuguese in Sri Lanka and South India: Studies in the History of Diplomacy, Empire and Trade, 1500–1650. Wiesbaden: Harrassowitz VerlagGoogle Scholar
Bilder, M. S. 2004, The Transatlantic Constitution: Colonial Legal Culture and the Empire, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Bilgin, P. 2016, ‘How to Remedy Eurocentrism in IR? A Complement and a Challenge for The Global Transformation, International Theory, 8(3), 492501Google Scholar
Binns, P. 1980, ‘Law and Marxism’, Capital and Class, 4, 100113Google Scholar
Birr, C. 2018, ‘Dominium in the Indies. Juan López de Palacios Rubios’ Libellus de insulis oceanis quas vulgus indias appelat (1512–1516)’, Rechtgeschichte, 26, 264283Google Scholar
Bittner, L., Gross, L., & Santifaller, L. (eds.) 1936–1965, Repertorium der diplomatischen Vertreter aller Länder (3 vols.), Zurich: Fretz & WasmuthGoogle Scholar
Black, J. 2001, British Diplomats and Diplomacy 1688–1800, Exeter: University of Exeter PressGoogle Scholar
Boogert, van der M. H. 2003, ‘Consular Jurisdiction in the Ottoman Legal System in the Eighteenth Century’, Oriente Moderno, 22(3), 613634Google Scholar
Borah, W. 1983, Justice by Insurance: The General Indian Court of Colonial Mexico and the Legal Aides of the Half-Real, Berkeley: University of California PressGoogle Scholar
Boulanger, P. 2006, ‘Les appointements des consuls de France à Alger au XVIIIe siècle’, in Ulbert, J. & Le Bouëdec, G. (eds.), La fonction consulaire à l’époque moderne: L’affirmation d’une institution économique et politique (1500–1800), Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 123146Google Scholar
Bowden, B. 2005, ‘The Colonial Origins of International Law. European Expansion and the Classical Standard of Civilization’, Journal of the History of International Law, 7, 123CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bowring, B. 2008, The Degradation of the International Legal Order? The Rehabilitation of Law and the Possibility of Politics, London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Bozeman, A. 1960 Politics and Culture in International History: From the Ancient Near East to the Opening of the Modern Age, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University PressGoogle Scholar
Brabazon, H. (ed.) 2016, Neoliberal Legality: Understanding the Role of Law in the Neoliberal Project, Abingdon, UK: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Branch, J. 2013, The Cartographic State: Maps, Territory, and the Origins of Sovereignty, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Brandon, P. 2011, ‘Marxism and the “Dutch Miracle”: The Dutch Republic and the Transition Debate’, Historical Materialism, 19(3), 106146CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Brandon, P. 2015, War, Capital, and the Dutch State (1588–1795), Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Brandon, P. 2019, ‘Between the Plantation and the Port: Racialization and Social Control in Eighteenth-Century Paramaribo’, International Review of Social History, 64Google Scholar
Brandon, P. & Fatah-Black, K. 2015, ‘“For the Reputation and Respectability of the State”: Trade, the Imperial State, Unfree Labor, and Empire in the Dutch Atlantic’, in Donoghue, John & Jennings, Evelyn P. (eds.), Building the Atlantic Empires: Unfree Labor and Imperial States in the Political Economy of Capitalism, ca. 1500–1914, Leiden: Brill, 84108Google Scholar
Breen, M. P. 2007, Law, City and King: Legal Culture, Municipal Politics, and State Formation in Early Modern Dijon, Rochester, NY: University of Rochester PressGoogle Scholar
Brenner, R. 1972, ‘The Social Basis of English Commercial Expansion 1550–1650’, in Subrahmanyam, S. (ed.), Merchant Networks in the Early Modern World, 1450–1800, London: Routledge, 1996, 280302 [orig. pub. in Journal of Economic History [1972] 32(1), 361–384]Google Scholar
Brenner, R. 1976, ‘Agrarian Class Structure and Economic Development in Pre-Industrial Europe’, Past and Present, 70Google Scholar
Brenner, R. 1977, ‘The Origins of Capitalist Development: A Critique of Neo-Smithian Marxism’, in New Left Review, 104, 2592Google Scholar
Brenner, R. 1997, ‘Property Relations and the Growth of Agricultural Productivity in Late Medieval and Early Modern Europe’, in Bhaduri, A. & Skarstein, R. (eds.), Economic Development and Agricultural Productivity, London: Edward Elgar, 944Google Scholar
Brenner, R. 2001, ‘The Low Countries in the Transition to Capitalism’, in Hoppenbrouwers, Peter & van Zanden, Jan Luiten (eds.), Peasants into Farmers?: The Transformation of Rural Economy and Society in the Low Countries (Middle Ages–19th Century) in Light of the Brenner Debate, Turnhout: Brepols, 275338Google Scholar
Brenner, R. 2003, Merchants and Revolution: Commercial Change, Political Conflict, and London’s Overseas Traders, 1550–1653, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Brenner, R. 2007a, ‘Property and Progress: Where Adam Smith Went Wrong’, in Wickham, Chris (ed), Marxist History-writing for the Twenty First Century, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 49111Google Scholar
Brenner, R. 2007b, ‘Structure versus Conjuncture’, New Left Review, II(43) (Jan.–Feb.), 3359Google Scholar
Brett, A. 2011, Changes of State: Nature and the Limits of the City in Early Modern Natural Law, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University PressGoogle Scholar
Brett, A. 2017, ‘Protection as a Political Concept in English Political Thought, 1603–1651’, in Benton, L., Clulow, A., & Attwood, B. (eds.), Protection and Empire: A Global History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 93113Google Scholar
Brophy, S. 2017, ‘An Uneven and Combined Theory of Law: Initiation’, Law Critique, 28: 167Google Scholar
Buckley, M. 1966, ‘Origins of Diplomatic Immunity in England’, University of Miami Law Review, 21, 349365Google Scholar
Bull, H. 1977, The Anarchical Society: A Study of Order in World Politics, London: MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Bull, H. & Watson, A. (eds.) 1984, The Expansion of International Society, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Burkholder, M. A. & Chandler, D. S. 1977, From Impotence to Authority: The Spanish Crown and the American Audiencias, 1687–1808 Columbia: University of Missouri PressGoogle Scholar
Burrage, M. 2006, Revolution and the Making of the Contemporary Legal Profession: England, France and the United States, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Bush, R., Bujra, J., & Littlejohn, G. 2011, ‘The Accumulation of Dispossession’, Review of African Political Economy, 38(128), 187192Google Scholar
Butler, G. & Maccoby, S. 1928, The Development of International Law, London: LongmansGoogle Scholar
Butterfield, H. & Wight, M. (eds.) 1966, Diplomatic Investigations, London: Allen & UnwinGoogle Scholar
Buzan, B. & Lawson, G. 2014, ‘Rethinking Benchmark Dates in International Relations’, European Journal of International Relations 20(2), 437462Google Scholar
Buzan, B. & Lawson, G. 2015 The Global Transformation: History, Modernity and the Making of International Relations, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
van Caenegem, R. C. 1987 Judges, Legislators and Professors: Chapters in European Legal History, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressCrossRefGoogle Scholar
van Caenegem, R. C. 2002, European Law in the Past and the Future: Unity and Diversity over Two Millennia, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Calafat, G. 2018a, ‘Les juridictions du consul: une institution au service des marchands et du commerce? Introduction’, in Bartolomei, A., Calafat, G., Grenet, M., & Ulbert, J. (eds.), De l’utilité commerciale des consuls: L’institution consulaire et les marchands dans le monde méditerranéen (XVIIe–XXe siècle), Rome: Publications de l’École française de Rome, 143153Google Scholar
Calafat, G. 2018b, ‘La juridiction des consuls français en Méditerranée; litiges marchands, arbitrages et circulations des procès’, in Bartolomei, A., Calafat, G., Grenet, M., & Ulbert, J. (eds.), De l’utilité commerciale des consuls: L’institution consulaire et les marchands dans le monde méditerranéen (XVIIe–XXe siècle), Rome: Publications de l’École française de Rome, 155172Google Scholar
Calafat, G. 2018c, ‘A “Nest of Pirates”? Consuls and Diplomatic Intermediaries in Algiers during the 1670s’, Studi e Materiali di Storia delle Religioni, 84(2), 529547Google Scholar
Calafat, G. 2019, Une mer jalousée. Contribution à l’histoire de la souveraineté (Méditerranée, XVIIe siècle), Paris: Éditions du SeuilGoogle Scholar
Calafat, G. & Monnet, E. 2017, ‘The Return of Economic History?’, Books & Ideas (30 Jan.), https://booksandideas.net/The-Return-of-Economic-History.html [accessed 27 October 2019]Google Scholar
Callières, François de. 1716, De la manière de négocier avec les souverains : de l'utilité des négociations, du choix des ambassadeurs et des envoyez, et des qualitez necessaires pour réussir dans ces emplois. Amsterdam: La CompagnieGoogle Scholar
Calvin’s Case 7 Coke Report 1a, 77 English Reports, 377, 1608Google Scholar
Cammack, P. 2017, ‘How The West Came to Rule Reviewed’, Progress in Political Economy Blog, http://ppesydney.net/west-came-rule-reviewed [accessed 27 October 2019]Google Scholar
Cañizares-Esguerra, J. (ed.) 2018 Entangled Empires: Anglo-Iberian Atlantic Worlds 1500–1830; the Atlantic in Global History, 1500–2000, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania PressGoogle Scholar
Cardim, P., Herzog, T., Ibanez, , & Sabatini, G. (eds.) 2012, Polycentric Monarchies: How Did Early Modern Spain and Portugal Achieve and Maintain a Global Hegemony? Brighton, UK: Sussex Academic PressGoogle Scholar
Carrió-Invernizzi, D. 2014, ‘A New Diplomatic History and the Networks of Spanish Diplomacy in the Baroque Era’, International History Review, 36(4), 603618Google Scholar
Carter, C. H. 1966, ‘The Ambassadors of Early Modern Europe: Patterns of Diplomatic Representation in the Early 17th Century’, in Carter, C. H. (ed.), From the Renaissance to the Counter Reformation: Essays in Honour of Garrett Mattingly, London: Jonathan CapeGoogle Scholar
Cassel, P. K. 2012, Grounds of Judgment: Extraterritoriality and Imperial Power in Nineteenth-Century China and Japan, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
de Carvalho, B., Leira, H., & Hobson, J. M. 2011, ‘The Big Bangs of IR: The Myths that Your Teachers Still Tell You about 1948 and 1919’, Millennium, 39(3): 735758.Google Scholar
Casey, J. 1999, Early Modern Spain: A Social History, London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Cavallar, G. 2008, ‘Vitoria, Grotius, Pufendorf, Wolff and Vattel: Accomplices of European Colonialism and Exploitation or True Cosmopolitans?’, Journal of the History of International Law, 10, 181209Google Scholar
Cavanagh, E. 2014, ‘Possession and Dispossession in Corporate New France, 1600–1663: Debunking a “Juridical History” and Revisiting Terra Nullius’, Law and History Review, 32, 97125Google Scholar
Cavanagh, E. 2017, ‘The Atlantic Prehistory of Private International Law: Trading Companies of the New World and the Pursuit of Restitution in England and France, 1613–1643’, Itinerario, 41(3), 452483Google Scholar
Chambre de Commerce de Marseille Archives J141, J1602, J176, J180, J2, B3Google Scholar
Chimni, B. S. 1993, International Law and World Order: A Critique of Contemporary Approaches, New Delhi: SageGoogle Scholar
Chimni, B. S. 1999, ‘Marxism and International Law: A Contemporary Analysis’, Political and Economic Weekly, 337–349Google Scholar
Chimni, B. S. 2007, ‘The Past, Present and Future of International Law: A Critical Third World Approach’, Melbourne Journal of International Law 8(2), 499Google Scholar
Chimni, B. S. 2008, ‘An Outline of a Marxist Course on Public International Law’, in Marks, Susan (ed.), International Law on the Left: Re-examining Marxist Legacies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 5391Google Scholar
Chorley, J. 2018, ‘Law and Primitive Accumulation: Canadian Settler Colonialism’, Legal Form Blog (6 Jan.), https://legalform.blog/2018/01/06/law-and-primitive-accumulation-canadian-settler-colonialism-jasmine-chorley [accessed 27 October 2019]Google Scholar
Colás, A. 2016, ‘Barbary Coast in the Expansion of International Society: Piracy and Corsairing as Primary Institutions’, Review of International Studies, 42(5), 840857Google Scholar
Coller, I. 2011, ‘Cosmopolitanism and Extraterritoriality: Regulating Europeans in 18th Century Turkey’, in Schmidt-Haberkamp, Barbara (ed.), Europa und die Türkei im 18. Jahrhundert/Europe and Turkey in the Eighteenth Century. Grenzüberschreitungen in kosmopolitischer Zeit, Bonn: V&R Unipress, 205218Google Scholar
Comninel, G. 1987, Rethinking the French Revolution: Marxism and the Revisionist Challenge, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Comninel, G. 2000, ‘English Feudalism and the Origins of Capitalism’, Journal of Peasant Studies, 27(4), 153Google Scholar
Cooper, L. 2017, ‘The Global Transformation: Critical Reflections on the Historical Sociology of the Long Nineteenth Century [review]’, Journal of Historical Sociology, 31: 7891Google Scholar
Corrigan, P. & Sayer, D. 1981, ‘How the Law Rules: Variations on Some Themes in Karl Marx’, in Fryer, B. et al. (eds.), Law, State and Society, London: Croom Helm, 2151Google Scholar
Craig, G. A. 1979, ‘On the Nature of Diplomatic History: The Relevance of Some Old Books’, in Lauren, P. Gordon (ed.), Diplomacy: New Approaches in History, Theory and Policy, New York: Free Press, 2142.Google Scholar
Cras, J. 2006, ‘Une approche archivistique des consulats de la Nation française: Les actes de chancellerie consulaire sous l’Ancien Régime’, in Ulbert, J. & Le Bouëdec, G. (eds.), La fonction consulaire à l’époque moderne: L’affirmation d’une institution économique et politique (1500–1800), Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 5184Google Scholar
Crawford, M. J., 2014, The Fight for Status and Privilege in Late Medieval and Early Modern Castile, 1465–1598, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania PressGoogle Scholar
Crespo Solano, A. 2006, ‘Merchants under Close Scrutiny: Spanish Monopoly with America and Laws against Foreigners’ Illegal Commerce’, in Lars Nilson CD-ROM Stads-och (ed.), Urban Europe in Comparative Perspective, Kommun: Historika. InstitutetGoogle Scholar
Crespo Solano, A. 2014A Network-Based Merchant Empire: Dutch Trade in the Spanish Atlantic 1680–1740’, in Oostindie, G. & Roitman, J. V. (eds.), Dutch Atlantic Connections 1600–1800: Linking Empires, Bridging Borders, Leiden: Brill, 139158Google Scholar
Curtis, D. R. & Campopiano, M. 2014, ‘Medieval Land Reclamation and the Creation of New Societies: Comparing Holland and the Po Valley, c. 800–1500’, Journal of Historical Geography, 44, 93108Google Scholar
Cutler, A. C. 1997, ‘Artifice, Ideology and Paradox: The Public/Private Distinction in International Law’, Review of International Political Economy, 4(2), 261–285Google Scholar
Cutler, A. C. 2001, ‘Critical Reflections on the Westphalian Assumptions of International Law and Organizations: A Crisis of Legitimacy’, Review of International Studies, 27, 133150Google Scholar
Cutler, A. C. 2002, ‘Historical Materialism, Globalization, and Law: Competing Conceptions of Property’, in Rupert, M. & Smith, H. (eds.), Historical Materialism and Globalization, London: Routledge, 230256Google Scholar
Cutler, A. C. 2003, Private Power and Global Authority: Transnational Merchant Law in the Global Political Economy, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Cutler, A. C. 2008, ‘Toward a Radical Political Economy Critique of Transnational Economic Law’, in Marks, Susan (ed.), International Law on the Left: Re-examining Marxist Legacies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 199219Google Scholar
Cutler, A. C. 2014, ‘New Constitutionalism and the Commodity Form of Global Capitalism’, in Gill, S. & Cutler, A. C. (eds.), New Constitutionalism and World Order, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 4562Google Scholar
Cutler, A. C. & Gill, S. (eds.) 2015, New Constitutionalism and World Order, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Cutler, A. C., Haufler, V., & Porter, T. (eds.) 1999, Private Authority and International Affairs, Albany, NY: State University of New York PressGoogle Scholar
Davidson, N. 2010, ‘Scotland: Birthplace of Passive Revolution?Capital and Class, 34(3), 343359Google Scholar
Davis-Cross, M. 2007, The European Diplomatic Corps: Diplomats and International Cooperation from Westphalia to Maastricht, New York: PalgraveGoogle Scholar
De Luca, K. A. 2008, ‘Beyond the Sea: Extraterritorial Jurisdiction and English Law, c. 1575–c. 1640’ (DPhil. dissertation, University of Columbia)Google Scholar
van Deusen, N. E. 2015, Global Indios: The Indigenous Struggle for Justice in Sixteenth-Century Spain, Durham, NC: Duke University PressGoogle Scholar
Dewar, H. 2011, ‘Souveraineté dans les colonies, souveraineté en métropole: le rôle de la Nouvelle-France dans la consolidation de l’autorité maritime en France, 1620–1628’, Revue d’histoire de l’Amérique française, 64(3–4), 6392Google Scholar
Dewar, H. 2012, ‘Y establir nostre auctorité’: Assertions of Imperial Sovereignty through Proprietorships and Chartered Companies in New France, 1598–1663 (PhD thesis, University of Toronto)Google Scholar
Dewar, H. 2013, ‘Litigating Empire: The Role of French Courts in Establishing Colonial Sovereignties’, in Benton, L. & Ross, R. J. (eds.), Legal Pluralism and Empires, 1500–1850, New York: New York University Press, 4979Google Scholar
Dhondt, F. 2016, ‘Recent Research in the History of International Law’, Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis/Revue d’histoire du droit/Legal History Review, 84(1–2), 313334Google Scholar
Dickason, O. P. 1989, ‘Concepts of Sovereignty at the Time of the First Contacts’, in Green, L. C. & Dickason, O. P., The Law of Nations in the New World, Alberta: University of Alberta Press, 141295Google Scholar
Dimmock, S. 2014, The Origin of Capitalism in England 1400–1600, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Dimmock, S. 2017, ‘The Eastern Origins of Capitalism?’, Historical Materialism Blog, www.historicalmaterialism.org/book-review/eastern-origins-capitalism [accessed 27 October 2019]Google Scholar
Dimmock, S. 2019, ‘Expropriation and the Political Origins of Agrarian Capitalism in England’, in Lafrance, X. & Post, C. (eds.), Case Studies in the Origins of Capitalism, London: Palgrave, 3962Google Scholar
Donlan, S. P. & Heirbaut, D. eds., 2015, The Law’s Many Bodies: Studies in Legal Hybridity and Jurisdictional Complexity, c. 1600–1900, Berlin: Duncker & HumblotCrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dorsett, S. & McVeigh, S. 2012, Jurisdiction, New York: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Dover, P. & Scott, H. 2015, ‘The Growth of Diplomacy, c. 1450–1815’, in Scott, Hamish M. (ed.) The Oxford Handbook of Early Modern European History, 1350–1750, Volume II: Cultures and Power, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Dufour, F. G. 2008, ‘Le retour du juridique comme dimension constitutive des théories critiques des relations internationales ?’, Études internationales, 39(1), 6381Google Scholar
Dupuy, P., & Chetail, V. (eds.) 2013, The Roots of International Law/Les fondements du droit international, Leiden: Brill/NijhoffGoogle Scholar
Durchardt, H. 2004, ‘Peace Treaties from Westphalia to the Revolutionary Era’, in Lesaffer, R. (ed.), Peace Treaties and International Law in European History: From the Late Middle Ages to World War One, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 4558Google Scholar
Duroselle, J. B. 1953, Histoire diplomatique de 1919 à nos jours Paris: DallozGoogle Scholar
Duvé, T. (ed.) 2014a, Entanglements in Legal History: Conceptual Approaches, Global Perspectives on Legal History, Frankfurt am Main: Max Planck Institute for European Legal History, Open Access PublicationGoogle Scholar
Duvé, T. 2014b, ‘Introduction’, in Duvé, T. (ed.), Entanglements in Legal History: Conceptual Approaches, Global Perspectives on Legal History, Frankfurt am Main: Max Planck Institute for European Legal History, Open Access Publication, 325Google Scholar
Duvé, T. & Pihlajamäki, H. (eds.) 2015, New Horizons in Spanish Colonial Law Contributions to Transnational Early Modern Legal History, Frankfurt am Main: Max Planck Institute for European Legal History, Open Access PublicationGoogle Scholar
Duzgun, E. 2020, ‘Against Eurocentric Anti-Eurocentrism: International Relations, Historical Sociology and Political Marxism’, Journal of International Relations and Development, 23(2), 285307Google Scholar
Duzgun, E. 2018b, ‘The International Relations of “Bourgeois Revolutions”: Disputing the Turkish Revolution’, European Journal of International Relations, 24(2), 414439.Google Scholar
Dyson, T. 2013, ‘English Diplomatic Agents 1603–1688’ (PhD thesis, Oxford University)Google Scholar
Ebben, M. A. 2017, ‘Lodewijck Huygens’ Spanish Journal, 1660–1661: Perceptions of Spain and Confirmation of the Identity of the Dutch Republic’, Dutch Crossing: Journal of Low Countries Studies, 42(2), 118134Google Scholar
Ebben, M.2018, ‘Cross-Confessional and Diplomatic Incidents: Dutch Ambassadors in Madrid, 1648–72’, in Fernández-Santos, Jorge and Luis Colomer, José (eds.), Ambassadors in Golden-Age Madrid: The Court of Philip IV ‘The Planet King’ through Foreign Eyes, Madrid: CEEH, 247272Google Scholar
Elliott, J. H. 1963, Imperial Spain 1469–1716, London: Edward ArnoldGoogle Scholar
Elliott, J. H. 1983, ‘A Question of Reputation? Spanish Foreign Policy in the Seventeenth Century’, Journal of Modern History, 55(3), 475483Google Scholar
Elliott, J. H. 1992, ‘A Europe of Composite Monarchies’, Past & Present, 137, 4871Google Scholar
Elliott, J. H. 2006, Empires of the Atlantic World: Britain and Spain in America, 1492–1830, London: Yale University PressGoogle Scholar
Elliott, J. H. 2012, History in the Making, New Haven, CT: Yale University PressGoogle Scholar
Emmer, P. C. 2014, ‘The Rise and Decline of the Dutch Atlantic, 1600–1800’, in Oostindie, G. & Roitman, J. V. (eds.), Dutch Atlantic Connections 1600–1800: Linking Empires, Bridging Borders, Leiden: Brill, 339356Google Scholar
Eslava, L. 2019, ‘TWAIL Coordinates’, Critical Legal Thinking Blog, http://criticallegalthinking.com/2019/04/02/twail-coordinates [accessed 27 October 2019]Google Scholar
Eslava, L., Nesiah, V. and Fakhri, M. (eds.) 2016, Bandung, Global History and International Law: Critical Pasts and Pending Futures, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Ewald, W. 1995, ‘Comparative Jurisprudence (II): The Logic of Legal Transplants’, American Journal of Comparative Law 43, 489510Google Scholar
Faivre d’Arcier, A. 2006, ‘Le service consulaire au Levant à la fin du XVIIIe siècle et son évolution sous la Révolution’, in Ulbert, J. & Le Bouëdec, G. (eds.), La fonction consulaire à l’époque moderne: L’affirmation d’une institution économique et politique (1500–1800), Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 161188Google Scholar
Farganel, J. P. 1996, ‘Négociants marseillais au Levant et dirigisme commercial: l’émergence d’une contestation nouvelle de l’autorité monarchique (1685–1789)’, Provence Historique, 183, 325Google Scholar
Fedele, D. 2016, ‘The Renewal of Early-Modern Scholarship on the Ambassador: Pierre Ayrault on Diplomatic Immunity’, Journal of the History of International Law/Revue d’histoire du droit international 18, 4, 449468Google Scholar
Fedele, D. 2017, Naissance de la diplomatie moderne (XIIIe–XVIIe siècles) L’ambassadeur au croisement du droit, de l’éthique et de la politique, Baden-Baden: Nomos VerlagsgesellschaftGoogle Scholar
Federici, S. 2014, Caliban and the Witch: Women, the Body and Primitive Accumulation, 2nd rev. ed., New York: AutonomediaGoogle Scholar
Fernández Castro, A. 2014, ‘A Transnational Empire Built on Law: The Case of the Commercial Jurisprudence of the House of Trade of Seville (1583–1598)’, in Duvé, T. (ed.), Entanglements in Legal History: Conceptual Approaches, Frankfurt am Main: Max Planck Institute for European Legal History, 187212Google Scholar
Fernández Chavez, M. & Gamero Rojas, M. 2017, ‘Nations? What Nations? Business in the Shaping of International Trade Networks’, in Herrero Sanchez, M. & Kaps, K. (eds.), Merchants and Trade Networks in the Atlantic and the Mediterranean 1550–1800, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 145168Google Scholar
Fine, B. 2002 [1984], Democracy and the Rule of Law: Marx’s Critique of the Legal Form, Caldwell, NJ: Blackburn PressGoogle Scholar
Fine, B., Kinsey, R., Lea, J., Picciotto, S., & Young, J. (eds.) 1979, Capitalism and the Rule of Law: From Deviancy Theory to Marxism, London: HutchinsonGoogle Scholar
Fitzmaurice, A. Humanism and America: Intellectual History of English Colonisation 1500–1625, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Fitzmaurice, A. 2014, Sovereignty, Property and Empire, 1500–2000, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Ford, L. 2010, Settler Sovereignty: Jurisdiction and Indigenous People in America and Australia, 1788–1836, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Ford, L. & Rowse, T. (eds.), 2013, Between Indigenous and Settler Governance, Abingdon, UK: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Ford, R. T. 1999, ‘Law’s Territory (A History of Jurisdiction)’, Michigan Law Review, 97, 843–93Google Scholar
Fradera, J. M. 2018, The Imperial Nation: Citizens and Subjects in the British, French, Spanish, and American Empires, trans. MacKay, Ruth, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University PressGoogle Scholar
Frey, L. S. & Frey, M. L. 1999, The History of Diplomatic Immunity, Columbus: Ohio State University PressGoogle Scholar
Frigo, D. (ed.) 2000, Politics and Diplomacy in Early Modern Italy: Structure of Diplomatic Practice 1450–1800, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Fryer, B., Hunt, A., McBarnet, D., & Moorhouse, B. 1981, ‘Law, State and Society’, in Fryer, B. et al. (eds.), Law, State and Society, London: Croom Helm, 920Google Scholar
Fusaro, M. 2010, ‘After Braudel: A Reassessment of Mediterranean History between the Northern Invasion and the Caravane Maritime’, in Fusaro, M., Heywood, C. J., & Omri, M.-S. (eds.), Trade and Cultural Exchange in the Early Modern Mediterranean. Braudel’s Maritime Legacy, London: I.B. Tauris, 122Google Scholar
Fusaro, M. 2012, ‘Cooperating Mercantile Networks in the Early Modern Mediterranean’, Economic History Review, 65(2), 701718Google Scholar
Fusaro, M. 2015, Political Economies of Empire in the Early Modern Mediterranean the Decline of Venice and the Rise of England 1450–1700, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Games, A. 2008, The Web of Empire: English Cosmopolitans in an Age of Expansion, 1560–1660, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Games, A. 2014, ‘A Dutch Moment in Atlantic Historiography’, in Oostindie, G. & Roitman, J. V. (eds.), Dutch Atlantic Connections 1600–1800: Linking Empires, Bridging Borders, Leiden: Brill, 363Google Scholar
Garcia-Salmones, M. 2017, ‘The Disorder of Economy? The first Relectio de Indis in a Theological Perspective’, in Kadelbach, S., Kleinlein, T., & Roth-Isigkeit, D. (eds.), System, Order and International Law: The Early History of International Legal Thought from Machiavelli to Hegel, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 443463Google Scholar
Garcia-Salmones, M. & Eslava, L. 2010, ‘Jurisdictional Colonisation in the Spanish and British Empires: Some Reflections on a Global Public Order and the Sacred’, in Ruiz Fabri, H., Wolfrum, R., & Gogolin, J. (eds.), Select Proceedings of the European Society of International Law, vol. II, London: Bloomsbury, 5381Google Scholar
Gathii, J. 2000, ‘Neoliberalism, Colonialism and International Governance: Decentering the International Law of Governmental Legitimacy’, Michigan Law Review, 98, 19962065Google Scholar
Geevers, L. & Marini, M. 2016, Dynastic Identity in Early Modern Europe: Rulers, Aristocrats and the Formation of Identities, Abingdon, UK: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Gerstenberger, H. 2007, Impersonal Power: History and Theory of the Bourgeois State, trans. Fernbach, D., Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Giry-Deloison, C. 1987, ‘Le personnel diplomatique au début du XVIe siècle. L’exemple des relations franco-anglaises de l’avènement d’Henry VII au camp du Drap d’or (1485–1520)’, Journal des Savants, 3, 205253Google Scholar
Go, J. 2013, ‘For a Postcolonial Sociology’, Theory and Society, 42(1), 2555Google Scholar
Go, J. & Lawson, G. 2017, ‘For a Global Historical Sociology’, in Go, Julian and Lawson, George (eds.), Global Historical Sociology, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 134Google Scholar
Gong, G. W. 1984, The Standard of ‘Civilization’ in International Society, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Goodman, D. C., 1997, Spanish Naval Power, 1589–1665: Reconstruction and Defeat, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Goodrich, P. 2008, ‘Visive Powers: Colours, Trees and Genres of Jurisdiction’, Law and Humanities, 2, 213Google Scholar
Gorski, P. S. 2003, The Disciplinary Revolution: Calvinism and the Rise of the State in Early Modern Europe, London: University of Chicago PressGoogle Scholar
Grafe, R. 2012, Distant Tyranny: Markets, Power, and Backwardness in Spain, 1650–1800, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University PressGoogle Scholar
Grafe, R. 2013, ‘Polycentric States: The Spanish Reigns and the “Failures” of Mercantilism’, in Stern, P. & Wennerlind, C. (eds.), Mercantilism Reimagined: Political Economy in Early Modern Britain and Its Empire, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 241262Google Scholar
Grafton Wilson, G. 1930, ‘The Exterritoriality of Ambassadors in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries by E. R. Adair [review]’, American Historical Review, 35(3), 592593Google Scholar
Graubart, K. B. 2018, ‘Containing Law within the Walls: The Protection of Customary Law in Santiago del Cercado, Peru’, in Benton, L., Clulow, A., & Attwood, B. (eds.), Protection and Empire: A Global History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2946Google Scholar
Green, L. C. & Dickason, O. P. 1989, The Law of Nations in the New World, Alberta: University of Alberta PressGoogle Scholar
Grenier, B. 2004, ‘“Nulle terre sans seigneur?”: Une étude comparative de la présence seigneuriale (France–Canada), XVIIe–XIXe siècle’, French Colonial History, 5, 724Google Scholar
Grewe, W. G. 2000, The Epochs of International Law, Berlin: Walter de GruyterGoogle Scholar
Grisel, E. 1976, ‘The Beginnings of International Law and General Public Law Doctrine: Francisco de Vitoria’s De Indis Prior’, in Chiapelli, F. (ed.), First Images of America, Volume I The Impact of the New World on the Old, Berkeley: University of California Press, 305325Google Scholar
Grotius, H. 1901, Rights to War and Peace Including the Law of Nature and of Nations. Translation of De jure belli et pacis by A. C. Campbell, Washington, DC: M. Walter DunneGoogle Scholar
Grotius, H. 1925, The Law of War and Peace in Three Books (1625) [De Jure Belli ac Pacis Libris Tres], trans. Kelsey, Francis W., Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Grotius, H. 2005, The Rights of War and Peace, edited with introduction by Richard Tuck, from the edition by Barbeyrac, Jean, Indianapolis: Liberty Fund (3 vols.)Google Scholar
Grovogui, N. S. 2009, ‘Counterpoints and the Imaginaries behind Them: Thinking beyond North American and European Traditions’, International Political Sociology, 3(3), 327331Google Scholar
Gulsah Capan, Z. 2017, ‘Decolonising International Relations?’, Third World Quarterly, 38(1), 115Google Scholar
Halperin, J. L. 2009, ‘The Concept of Law: A Western Transplant?Theoretical Inquiries in Law, 10(2), 333354Google Scholar
Hamilton, B. 1963, Political Thought in Sixteenth-Century Spain: A Study of the Political Ideas of Vitoria, De Soto, Suarez, and Molina, Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Hampton, T. 2009, Fictions of Embassy: Literature and Diplomacy in Early Modern Europe, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University PressGoogle Scholar
Hanke, L. 1974, All Mankind Is One: A Study of the Disputation between Bartolomé de Las Casa and Juan Ginès de Sepúlveda on the Religious and Intellectual Capacity of the American Indian, Dekalb, IL: Northern Illinois University PressGoogle Scholar
Hardy, D. 2018, Associative Political Culture in the Holy Roman Empire: Upper Germany, 1346–1521, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Hart, H. L. A. 1958, ‘Positivism and the Separation of Law and Morals’, Harvard Law Review, 71(4), 593629Google Scholar
Haskell, J. 2019, ‘Ways of Doing Extraterritoriality in Scholarship’, in Margolies, D. S., Özsu, U., Pal, M., & Tzouvala, N. (eds.), The Extraterritoriality of Law: History, Theory, Politics, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 1329Google Scholar
Hébié, M. 2015, Souveraineté territoriale par traité: Une étude des accords entre puissances coloniales et entités politiques locales, Paris: Presses Universitaires de FranceGoogle Scholar
Heine, C. & Teschke, B. 1996, ‘Sleeping Beauty and the Dialectical Awakening: On the Potential of Dialectic for International Relations’, Millennium Journal of International Studies, 35, 399423Google Scholar
Heinsen-Roach, E. 2012, ‘Consuls, Corsairs, and Captives: the creation of Dutch diplomacy in the early Modern Mediterranean, 1596–1699’ (DPhil. dissertation, University of Miami)Google Scholar
Heinsen-Roach, E. 2015, ‘Consuls-of-State and the Redemption of Slaves: The Dutch Republic and the Western Mediterranean, 1616–1651’, Itinerario, 39(1), 6990Google Scholar
Hennings, J. 2016, Russia and Courtly Europe: Ritual and the Culture of Diplomacy, 1648–1725, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Herrero Sanchez, M. & Kaps, K. (eds.) 2017a, Merchants and Trade Networks in the Atlantic and the Mediterranean 1550–1800, Abingdon, UK: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Herrero Sanchez, M. & Kaps, K. 2017b, ‘Connectors, Networks, and Commercial Systems: Approaches to the Study of Early Modern Maritime Trade History’, in Herrero Sanchez, M. & Kaps, K. (eds.), Merchants and Trade Networks in the Atlantic and the Mediterranean 1550–1800, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 136Google Scholar
Hernández, J. 2011, ‘Chapter Ten. A History of the Spanish Consular Service: An Institution in Its Own Right’, in Consular Affairs and Diplomacy (vol. VII), Leiden: Brill, 225246Google Scholar
Herzog, T. 2015a, Frontiers of Possession: Spain and Portugal in Europe and the Americas, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Herzog, T. 2015b, ‘Struggling over Indians: Territorial Conflict and Alliance Making in the Heartland of South America (Seventeenth to Eighteenth Centuries)’, in Belmessous, Saliha (ed.), Empire by Treaty. Negotiation European Expansion 1600–1900, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 78101Google Scholar
Hill, C. 1991, The World Turned Upside Down: Radical Ideas during the English Revolution, London: PenguinGoogle Scholar
Hobsbawm, E. 1994, The Age of Extremes: The Short Twentieth Century, 1914–1991, London: PenguinGoogle Scholar
Hobson, J. M. (1998), ‘The “Second Wave” of Weberian Historical Sociology - The Historical Sociology of the State and the State of Historical Sociology in International Relations. Review of International Political Economy, 5:2, 284320Google Scholar
Hobson, J. H. 2002, ‘What’s at Stake in “Bringing Historical Sociology Back into International Relations’? Transcending “Chronofetisism” and “Tempocentrism” in International Relations’, in Hobson, John M. & Hobden, Stephen (eds.), Historical Sociology of International Relations, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 341Google Scholar
Hobson, J. H. 2012, The Eurocentric Conception of World Politics, Western International Theory, 1760–2010, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Hobson, J. H. & Hobden, S. (eds.) 2002, Historical Sociology of International Relations, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Hobson, J. H. & Sajed, A. 2017, ‘Navigating beyond the Eurofetishist Frontier of Critical IR Theory: Exploring the Complex Landscapes of Non-Western Agency’, International Studies Review, 19(4), 547572Google Scholar
Hobson, J. M. Lawson, G. & Rosenberg, J. 2010, ‘Historical Sociology’, in Denemark, Robert A. (ed.), The International Studies Encyclopaedia, Wiley-Blackwell; International Studies Association, UKGoogle Scholar
Holdsworth, S. 1945, A History of English Law, London: MethuenGoogle Scholar
Holmes, C. 1997, ‘The Legal Instruments of Power and the State in Early Modern England’, in Padoa-Schioppa, A. (ed.), Legislation and Justice, Oxford: Clarendon Press, 269289Google Scholar
Horowitz, R. S. 2004, ‘International Law and State Transformation in China, Siam, and the Ottoman Empire during the Nineteenth Century’, Journal of World History, 15(4), 445486Google Scholar
Horn, D. B. 1961, The British Diplomatic Service 1689–1789, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Horn, J. 2011, ‘Marseille et la question du mercantilisme: Privilège, liberté et économie politique en France, 1650–1750’, Histoire, économie & société, 2(30e), 95111Google Scholar
Horn, J. 2015, Economic Development in Early Modern France: The Privilege of Liberty, 1650–1820, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Hotman, J. 1603, L’ambassadeur, LondonGoogle Scholar
Houssiau, J. 2000, ‘Les ambassadeurs des Pays-Bas à Vervins: prémices d’une diplomatie “belge”?’, in Labourdette, J. F., Poussou, Jean-Pierre and Vignal, Marie-Catherine (eds.), Le Traité de Vervins Paris: Presses de l’Université de Paris-Sorbonne, 267282Google Scholar
Houston, R. A. 2018, ‘The Composition and Distribution of the Legal Profession, and the Use of Law in Britain and Ireland, c. 1500–c. 1850’, Tijdschrift voor Rechtsgeschiedenis/Revue d’histoire du droit/Legal History Review, 86(1–2), 123156Google Scholar
Hueck, I. J. 2001, ‘The Discipline of the History of International Law’, Journal of the History of International Law/Revue d’histoire du droit international, 3(2), 194217Google Scholar
Hulsebosch, D. 2005, Constituting Empire: New York and the Transformation of Constitutionalism in the Atlantic World, 1664–1830, Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina PressGoogle Scholar
Ince, O. U. 2014, ‘Primitive Accumulation, New Enclosures, and Global Land Grabs: A Theoretical Intervention’, Rural Sociology 79(1), 104131Google Scholar
Ince, O. U. 2018, ‘Between Equal Rights: Primitive Accumulation and Capital’s Violence’, Political Theory, 46(6), 885914Google Scholar
Israel, J. 1989, Dutch Primacy in World Trade 1585–1740, Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
van Ittersum, M. J. 2006, Profit and Principle: Hugo Grotius, Natural Rights Theories and the Rise of Dutch Power in the East Indies, 1595–1615, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
van Ittersum, M. J. 2016, ‘Hugo Grotius: The Making of a Founding Father of International Law’, in Orford, Anne & Hoffmann, Florian (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the Theory of International Law, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 82100Google Scholar
Ives, E. W. 1983, The Common Lawyers of Pre-Reformation England, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Jacobsen, H. 2011, Luxury and Power: The Material World of the Stuart Diplomat, 1660–1714, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Jahn, B. 2000, The Cultural Construction of International Relations, Basingstoke, UK: PalgraveGoogle Scholar
Jahn, B. (ed.) 2006, Classical Theory in International Relations, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Jettot, S. 2012, Représenter le Roi ou la Nation? Parlementaires dans la diplomatie anglaise 1660–1702, Paris: Presses de l’Université de Paris-SorbonneGoogle Scholar
Kadelbach, S., Kleinlein, T., & Roth-Isigkeit, D. (eds.) 2017, System, Order, and International Law: The Early History of International Legal Thought from Machiavelli to Hegel, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Kaiser, W. & Calafat, G. 2014, ‘Violence, Protection and Commerce: Corsairing and ars piratica in the Early Modern Mediterranean’, in Amirell, S. E. & Müller, L. (eds.), Persistent Piracy: Maritime Violence and State-Formation in Global Historical Perspective, London: Palgrave, 6992Google Scholar
Kaplan, B. J. 2002, ‘Diplomacy and Domestic Devotion: Embassy Chapels and the Toleration of Religious Dissent in Early Modern Europe’, Journal of Early Modern History, 6(4), 341361Google Scholar
Kassan, S. 1935, ‘Extraterritorial Jurisdiction in the Ancient World’, American Journal of International Law, 29, 237Google Scholar
Kayaoglu, T. 2010, Legal Imperialism: Sovereignty and Extraterritoriality in Japan, the Ottoman Empire, and China, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Keene, E. 2002, Beyond the Anarchical Society: Grotius, Colonialism and Order in World Politics, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Keene, E. 2013, ‘International Hierarchy and the Origins of the Modern Practice of Intervention’, Review of International Studies, 39, 10771090Google Scholar
Keene, E. 2017, ‘International Intellectual History and International Relations: Contexts, Canons and Mediocrities’, International Relations 31(3), 341356Google Scholar
Keens-Soper, H. M. A. & Schweizer, K. W. (eds.) 1994, François de Callières, The Art of Diplomacy, Lanham, MD: Rowman & LittlefieldGoogle Scholar
Knafla, L. A. & Binnie, S. W. S. (eds.) 1995, Law, Society and the State: Essays in Modern Legal History, London: University of Toronto PressGoogle Scholar
Knafo, S. 2007, ‘Political Marxism and Value Theory: Bridging the Gap between Theory and History’, Historical Materialism, 15, 75104Google Scholar
Knafo, S. 2010, ‘Critical Approaches and the Legacy of the Agent/Structure Debate in International Relations’, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 23(3), 493516Google Scholar
Knafo, S. 2013, The Making of Modern Finance: Liberal Governance and the Gold Standard. London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Knafo, S. 2017, ‘A Methodological Turn Long Overdue: Or, Why It Is Time for Critical Scholars to Cut Their Losses’, in Selby, Jan, Dyvik, Synne L., & Wilkinson, Rorden (eds.), What’s the Point of International Relations? London: Routledge, 242252Google Scholar
Knafo, S. & Teschke, B. 2020, ‘The Rules of Reproduction of Capitalism: A Historicist Critique’, Historical Materialism, 28(3)Google Scholar
Knox, R. 2009, ‘Marxism, International Law, Political Strategy’, Leiden Journal of International Law, 22, 413436Google Scholar
Knox, R. 2010, ‘Strategy and Tactics’, Finnish Yearbook of International Law, 21, 193229Google Scholar
Knox, R. 2016a, ‘Valuing Race? Stretched Marxism and the Logic of Imperialism’, London Review of International Law’, 4(1), 81126Google Scholar
Knox, R. 2016b, ‘Marxist Theories of International Law’, The Oxford Handbook of the Theory of International Law, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 306326Google Scholar
Knox, R. 2018, ‘Marxist Approaches to International Law’, Oxford Bibliographies Online, www.oxfordbibliographies.com/view/document/obo-9780199796953/obo-9780199796953-0163.xml [accessed 27 October 2019]Google Scholar
Kochi, T. 2017, ‘Dreams and Nightmares of Liberal International Law: Capitalist Accumulation, Natural Rights and State Hegemony’, Law Critique, 28, 2341Google Scholar
Koenigsberger, H. G. 1986, Politicians and Virtuosi: Essays in Early Modern History, London: Hambledon PressGoogle Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 1992, ‘Introduction’, in Koskenniemi, Martti (ed.), International Law, Dartmouth: Aldershot, xixxxiiGoogle Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2000, ‘Carl Schmitt, Hans Morgenthau, and the Image of Law in International Relations’, in Byers, M. (ed.), The Role of Law in International Politics, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2001, The Gentle Civilizer of Nations: The Rise and Fall of International Law 1870–1960, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2004, ‘The History of International Law Today’, RechtsgeschichteGoogle Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2005, From Apology to Utopia: The Structure of International Legal Argument, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2008, ‘What should international lawyers learn from Karl Marx?’, in Marks, Susan (ed.), International Law on the Left: Re-examining Marxist Legacies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 3052Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2011, ‘International Law and Empire: The Real Spanish Contribution’, University of Toronto Law Journal, 61, 136Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2014, ‘International and the Emergence of Mercantile Capitalism: From Grotius to Smith’, in Dupuy, P. & Chetail, V. (eds.), The Roots of International Law/Les fondements du droit international, Leiden: Brill/Nijhoff, 338Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2016, ‘Expanding Histories of International Law’, American Journal of Legal History, 56, 104112Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2017a, ‘Introduction’, in Koskenniemi, M., Rech, W., & Jimenez Fonseca, M. (eds.), International Law and Empire: Historical Explorations, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 118Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, M. 2017b, ‘Sovereignty, Property and Empire: Early Modern English Contexts’, Theoretical Inquiries in Law 18, 355389Google Scholar
Koskenniemi, M., Rech, W., & Jimenez Fonseca, M. (eds.) 2017, International Law and Empire: Historical Explorations, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Krasner, S. 1993, ‘Westphalia and All That’, in Goldstein, Judith and Keohane, Robert O. (eds.), Ideas and Foreign Policy: Beliefs, Institutions, and Political Change, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University Press, 235–65Google Scholar
Krever, T. 2018, ‘The Rule of Law and the Rise of Capitalism’, in May, Christopher and Winchester, Adam (eds.), Handbook on the Rule of Law, London: Edward Elgar, 184200Google Scholar
Krynen, J. 2009, L’État de justice France, XIIIe–XXe siècle. Tome I: L’Idéologie de la magistrature ancienne, Paris: GallimardGoogle Scholar
Kugeler, H. 2006, ‘Le Parfait Ambassadeur: The Theory and Practice of Diplomacy in the Century Following the Peace of Westphalia’ (DPhil. thesis, University of Oxford)Google Scholar
Kuru, D. 2016, ‘Historicising Eurocentrism and Anti-Eurocentrism in IR: A Revisionist Account of Disciplinary Self-Reflexivity’, Review of International Studies, 42, 351376Google Scholar
Lacher, H. 2006, Beyond Globalisation: Capitalism, Territoriality and the International Relations of Modernity, London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Lachmann, R. 2018, ‘What Empires Can and Can’t Do’, Comparative Studies in Society and History, 60(4), 11271142Google Scholar
Lachs, P. S. 1965, The Diplomatic Corps under Charles II and James II, New Brunswick, NJ: Rutgers University PressGoogle Scholar
Lafrance, X. 2019, The Making of Capitalism in France, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Lafrance, X. & Post, C. (eds.) 2019a, Case Studies in the Origins of Capitalism, London: PalgraveGoogle Scholar
Lafrance, X. & Post, C. 2019b, ‘Introduction’, in Lafrance, Xavier & Post, Charles (eds.), Case Studies in the Origins of Capitalism, London: Palgrave, 138Google Scholar
Lapid, Y. 1989, ‘The Third Debate: On the Prospects of International Theory in a Post-Positivist Era’, International Studies Quarterly, 33, 235254Google Scholar
Lapointe, T. & Dufour, G. 2012, ‘Assessing the Historical Turn in IR: An Anatomy of Second Wave Historical Sociology’, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 25(1), 97121Google Scholar
Lee, M. Jr, 1966–1967, ‘The Jacobean Diplomatic Service’, American Historical Review, 72, 12761280Google Scholar
Legrand, P. 1997, ‘The Impossibility of “Legal Transplants”’, Maastricht Journal of European & Comparative Law, 4, 111124Google Scholar
Leira, H. & Neumann, I. B. 2008, ‘Consular Representation in an Emerging State: The Case of Norway’, The Hague Journal of Diplomacy 3, 119Google Scholar
Leira, H. & Neumann, I. B. 2012, ‘Consular Diplomacy’, in Kerr, Pauline & Wiseman, Geoffrey (eds.), Diplomacy in a Globalizing World: Theories and Practices, New York: Oxford University Press, 160175Google Scholar
Lesaffer, R. 2002, ‘The Grotian Tradition Revisited; Change and Continuity in the History of International Law’, in Crawford, James and Lowe, Vaughan (eds.), British Yearbook of International Law, vol. 73, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 103139Google Scholar
Lesaffer, R. 2017, ‘Between Faith and Empire: The justification of the Spanish Intervention in the French Wars of Religion in the 1590s’, in Koskenniemi, M., Rech, W., & Jimenez Fonseca, M. (eds.), International Law and Empire: Historical Explorations, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 101122Google Scholar
Levillain, C.-E. 2016, ‘French Diplomacy and the Run-up to the Glorious Revolution (1688): A Critical Reading of Jean-Antoine d’Avaux’s Correspondence as Ambassador to the States General’, Journal of Modern History, 88(1), 130150Google Scholar
Levin, M. J. 2002, ‘A New World Order: The Spanish Campaign for Precedence in Early Modern Europe’, Journal of Early Modern History, 6(3), 233264Google Scholar
Lindemann, M., 2015, The Merchant Republics: Amsterdam, Antwerp, and Hamburg, 1648–1790, New York: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Little, R. 2000, ‘The English School’s Contribution to the Study of International Relations’, European Journal of International Relations, 6(3), 395422Google Scholar
Liu, S. S. 1925, Extraterritoriality: Its Rise and Decline, New York: Columbia University PressGoogle Scholar
McDougal, M. S. & Lasswell, H. D. 1996 [1959], ‘The Identification and Appraisal of Diverse Systems of Public Order’, in Beck, R., Clark Arend, A., & Vander Lugt, R. D. (eds.), International Rules: Approaches from International Law and International Relations, New York: Oxford University Press, 113143Google Scholar
McNally, D. 2012, Monsters of the Market: Zombies, Vampires and Global Capitalism, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
McNally, D. 2020, Blood and Money: War, Slavery, and the State, Chicago: HaymarketGoogle Scholar
Macmillan, K. 2006, Sovereignty and Possession in English New World, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Mann, M. 1986, The Sources of Social Power Vol. 1. Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Margolies, D. S., Özsu, U., Pal, M., & Tzouvala, N. (eds.) 2019, The Extraterritoriality of Law: History, Theory, Politics, Abingdon, UK: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Marks, S. 1997, ‘The End of History? Reflections on some International Legal Theses’, European Journal of International Law, 3, 449477Google Scholar
Marks, S. 2007, ‘International Judicial Activism and the Commodity Form Theory of International Law’, European Journal of International Law, 18(1), 199211Google Scholar
Marks, S. 2008, ‘Introduction’, in Marks, Susan (ed.) International Law on the Left: Re-examining Marxist Legacies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 129Google Scholar
Marx, K. 1959, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy, Vol. 3, London: Lawrence & WishartGoogle Scholar
Marx, K. 1971, A Contribution to the Critique of Political Economy, London: Lawrence & WishartGoogle Scholar
Marx, K. 1976, Capital: A Critique of Political Economy Vol. 1, trans. Fowkes, Ben, London: PenguinGoogle Scholar
Marx, K. & Engels, F., 1939 [1854]. Revolution in Spain, London: Lawrence & WishartGoogle Scholar
Marzagalli, S. 2014, ‘The French Atlantic and the Dutch, Late Seventeenth-Late Eighteenth’, in Oostindie, G. & Roitman, J. V. (eds.), Dutch Atlantic Connections 1600–1800: Linking Empires, Bridging Borders, Leiden: Brill, 103118Google Scholar
Marzagalli, S. 2016, ‘Was Warfare Necessary for the Functioning of Eighteenth-Century Colonial Systems? Some Reflections on the Necessity of Cross-Imperial and Foreign Trade in the French Case’, in Antunes, C. & Polónia, A. (eds.), Beyond Empires: Global, Self-Organizing, Cross-Imperial Networks, 1500–1800, Leiden: Brill, 253277Google Scholar
Marzagalli, S. & Marnot, B. (eds.) 2006, Guerre et économie dans l’espace atlantique du XVIe au XXe siècles, Bordeaux: Presses Universitaires de BordeauxGoogle Scholar
Masson, P. 1896, Histoire du commerce français dans le Levant au 18e siècle. Thèse, Paris: Librairie HachetteGoogle Scholar
Mate, M. E. 2006, Trade and Economic Developments, 1450–1550: The Experience of Kent, Surrey and Sussex, Woodbridge, UK: Boydell PressGoogle Scholar
Mather, J. 2011, Pashas, Traders and Travellers in the Islamic World, London: Yale University PressGoogle Scholar
Mattingly, G. 1955/1966, Renaissance Diplomacy, London: PenguinGoogle Scholar
van Meersbergen, G. 2017, ‘The Dutch Merchant–Diplomat in Comparative Perspective: Embassies in the Court of Aurangzeb 1660–1666’, in Sowerby, T. A. & Hennings, J. (eds.), Practices of Diplomacy in the Early Modern World c. 1410–1800, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 147165Google Scholar
Meguro, M. 2019, ‘Backlash Against International Law by the East? How the Concept of “Transplantation” Helps Us to Better Understand Reception Processes of International Law’, Völkerrechtsblog (11 Jan.) https://voelkerrechtsblog.org/backlash-against-international-law-by-the-east [accessed 27 October 2019]Google Scholar
Mézin, A., 1997, Les consuls de France au siècle des Lumières (1715–1792), Paris: La Documentation FrançaiseGoogle Scholar
Mézin, A., 2006, ‘La fonction consulaire dans la France d’Ancien Régime: origine, principes, prérogatives’, in Ulbert, J. & Le Bouëdec, G. (eds.), La fonction consulaire à l’époque modern: L’affirmation d’une institution économique et politique (1500–1800), Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 3749Google Scholar
Mezzadra, S. 2011, ‘The Topicality of Prehistory: A New Reading of Marx’s Analysis of “So-called Primitive Accumulation”’, Rethinking Marxism: A Journal of Economics, Culture & Society, 23(3), 302321Google Scholar
Midnight Notes, 1990, New Enclosures, Jamaica Plain, MA: Midnight NotesGoogle Scholar
Miéville, C. 2005, Between Equal Rights: A Marxist Theory of International Law, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Miéville, C. 2008, ‘The Commodity-Form Theory of International Law’, in Marks, Susan (ed.), International Law on the Left: Re-examining Marxist Legacies, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 92132Google Scholar
Milanovic, M. 2011, Extraterritorial Application of Human Rights Treaties, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Miles, K. 2019, ‘“Uneven Empires”: Extraterritoriality and the Early Trading Companies’, in Margolies, D. S., Özsu, U., Pal, M., & Tzouvala, N. (eds.), The Extraterritoriality of Law: History, Theory, Politics, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 87104Google Scholar
Miller, S. 2008, State and Society in Eighteenth-Century France: A Study of Political Power and Social Revolution in Languedoc, Washington, DC: Catholic University of America PressGoogle Scholar
Moeglin, J.-M. & Pèquignot, S. 2017, Diplomatie et relations internationales au moyen-âge (IXe–XVe siècle), Paris: Presses Universitaires de FranceGoogle Scholar
Mooers, C. 1991, The Making of Bourgeois Europe: Absolutism, Revolution and the Rise of Capitalism in England, France and Germany, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Mooers, C. 2014, Imperial Subjects: Citizenship in an Age of Crisis and Empire, New York: BloomsburyGoogle Scholar
Moore, B. 1967, Social Origins of Dictatorship and Development: Lord and Peasant in the Making of the Modern World, New York: BeaconGoogle Scholar
Moreno Zacarés, J. 2018, ‘Beyond Market Dependence: The Origins of Capitalism in Catalonia’, Journal of Agrarian Change, 18, 749767Google Scholar
Morgan, K. 2014, ‘Anglo-Dutch Economic Relations in the Atlantic World 1688–1783’, in Oostindie, G. & Roitman, J. V. (eds.), Dutch Atlantic Connections 1600–1800: Linking Empires, Bridging Borders, Leiden: Brill, 119138Google Scholar
Morgenthau, H. J. 1967, Politics Among Nations: The Struggle for Power and Peace, 4th ed. (rev. Kenneth W. Thompson) New York: KnopfGoogle Scholar
Morin, M. 2010, ‘Des nations libres sans territoire? Les Autochtones et la colonisation de l’Amérique française du XVIe au XVIIIe siècle’, Journal of the History of International Law, 12, 170Google Scholar
Moyn, S. & Sartori, A. (eds.) 2015, Global Intellectual History, New York: Columbia University PressGoogle Scholar
Napolitano, E. C. 2012, ‘Prospects of Statecraft: Diplomacy, Territoriality, and the Vision of French Nationhood in Rome, 1660–1700’ (PhD thesis, University of Toronto)Google Scholar
Neff, S. C. 2006, ‘A Short History of International Law’, in Evans, M. D. (ed.), International Law, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2955Google Scholar
Neff, S. C. 2014, Justice among Nations: A History of International Law, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Neocleous, M. 2012, ‘International Law as Primitive Accumulation; or, the Secret of Systematic Colonization’, European Journal of International Law, 23–4, 941962Google Scholar
Nexon, D. H. 2009, The Struggle for Power in Early Modern Europe: Religious Conflict, Dynastic Empires and International Change, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University PressGoogle Scholar
Noiriel, G. 2018, Une histoire populaire de la France: De la guerre de cent ans à nos jours, AgoneGoogle Scholar
Nordman, D. 1998, Frontières de France: De l’espace au territoire, XVIe–XIXe siècle Paris: GallimardGoogle Scholar
North, D. & Weingast, B. 1989, ‘Constitutions and Commitment: The Evolution of Institutions Governing Public Choice in Seventeenth-Century England’, Journal of Economic History, 49(4), 803832Google Scholar
Nys, E., 1894. Les origines du droit international, Brussels: A. CastaigneGoogle Scholar
Numelin, R. J. 1950, The Beginnings of Diplomacy: A Sociological Study of Intertribal and International Relations, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Nussbaum, A. 1954, A Concise History of the Law of Nations, New York: MacmillanGoogle Scholar
Nuzzo, L. 2011, ‘Colonial Law’, European History Online (EGO), Leibniz Institute of European History (IEG), Mainz, www.ieg-ego.eu/nuzzol-2011-en [accessed 28 October 2019]Google Scholar
Nuzzo, L. 2017, ‘Territory, Sovereignty, and the Construction of the Colonial Space’, in Koskenniemi, M., Rech, W., & Jimenez Fonseca, M. (eds.), International Law and Empire: Historical Explorations, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 263292Google Scholar
O’Connell, P. 2017, Masking Barbarism: Human Rights in the Contemporary Global Order, London: HartGoogle Scholar
O’Connell, P. 2018, ‘Law, Marxism and Method’, tripleC, 16(2), 647655Google Scholar
O’Connell, P. & Öszu, U. (eds.) forthcoming, Handbook of Law and Marxism, London: Edward ElgarGoogle Scholar
Odysseos, L. & Pal, M. 2017, ‘Towards Critical Pedagogies of the International? Student Resistance, Self-formation and Other-regardedness in the Neoliberal University’, International Studies Perspectives, 19(1), 126Google Scholar
Orford, A. 2009, ‘Jurisdiction without Territory: From the Holy Roman Empire to the Responsibility to Protect’, Michigan Journal of International Law, 30, 9811015Google Scholar
Orford, A. 2017, ‘International Law and the Limits of History’, in Werner, W., De Hoon, M., & Galán, A. (eds.), The Law of International Lawyers: Reading Martti Koskenniemi, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 297320Google Scholar
Osiander, A. 2001, ‘Sovereignty, International Relations, and the Westphalian Myth’, International Organization, 55, 251287Google Scholar
Owens, J. B. 2005, By My Absolute Royal Authority’ Justice and the Castilian Commonwealth at the Beginning of the First Global Age, Rochester, NY: University of Rochester PressGoogle Scholar
Owensby B, P. 2011, Empire of Law and Indian Justice in Colonial Mexico, California: Stanford University PressGoogle Scholar
Ozanam, D. 1999, Les diplomates espagnols du XVIIIe siècle: introduction et répertoire biographique, 1700–1808, Madrid: Casa de VelázquezGoogle Scholar
Özsu, U. 2012, ‘Ottoman Empire’, in Fassbender, Bardo & Peters, Anne (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of the History of International Law, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 429448Google Scholar
Özsu, U. 2014, Formalizing Displacement: International Law and Population Transfers, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Özsu, U. 2019, ‘Grabbing Land Legally: A Marxist Analysis’, Leiden Journal of International Law, 32, 215233Google Scholar
Pacheco, A. J. C. 2017, ‘Primitive Accumulation in Indigenous Mexico’, City, 21(3–4), 503519Google Scholar
Pagano de Divitiis, G. 1997, English Merchants in Seventeenth-Century Italy, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Pagden, A. (ed.) 1987, The Languages of Political Theory in Early-Modern Europe, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Pagden, A. 1990, Spanish Imperialism and the Political Imagination: Studies in European and Spanish-American Social Political Theory 1513–1830, London: Yale University PressGoogle Scholar
Pagden, A. 1995, Lords of All the World: Ideologies of Empire in Spain, Britain and France, c. 1500–c. 1800, New Haven, CT: Yale University PressGoogle Scholar
Pagden, A. 2003, ‘Human Rights, Natural Rights, and Europe’s Imperial Legacy’, Political Theory, 31(2), 171199Google Scholar
Pahuja, S. 2011, Decolonizing International Law: Development, Economic Growth and the Politics of Universality, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Pahuja, S. 2013, ‘Laws of Encounter: A Jurisdictional Account of International Law’, London Review of International Law, 1(1), 6398Google Scholar
Pal, M. 2018My Capitalism Is Bigger than Yours! Against Combining “How the West Came to Rule” with “the Origins of Capitalism”’, Historical Materialism, 26(3), 99124Google Scholar
Pal, M. 2019, ‘Early Modern Extraterritoriality, Diplomacy and the Transition to Capitalism’, in Margolies, D. S., Özsu, U., Pal, M., & Tzouvala, N. (eds.), The Extraterritoriality of Law: History, Theory, Politics, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 6986Google Scholar
Pal, M. forthcoming, ‘Historical Sociology in IR’, in Bukovansky, Keene & Spanu, Reus-Smit (eds.), The Oxford Handbook of History and International Relations, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Pal, M. forthcoming, ‘On the Methodological Limits of the Commodity Form Theory of Law in The Corporation, Law and Capitalism’, London Review of International LawGoogle Scholar
Parfitt, R. 2019, The Process of International Legal Reproduction: Inequality, Historiography, Resistance, Cambridge: Cambridge UniversityGoogle Scholar
Paris, R. 1957, Histoire du commerce de Marseille, tome V: De 1660 à 1789. Le Levant, Paris: PlonGoogle Scholar
Parker, D. 1989, ‘Sovereignty, Absolutism, and the Function of the Law in Seventeenth Century France’, Past and Present, 122 (Feb.), 30–74Google Scholar
Parker, D. 1996, Class and State in Ancien Régime France: The Road to Modernity? London: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Parker, D. 2003, ‘Absolutism, Feudalism and Property Rights in the France of Louis XIV’, Past and Present, 179 (May), 60–96Google Scholar
Parry, J. H. 1990 [1966], The Spanish Seaborne Empire, Berkeley: University of California PressGoogle Scholar
Pashukanis, E. 1978, Law and Marxism: A General Theory, London: Ink LinksGoogle Scholar
Pashukanis, E. 2005, ‘International Law’ [entry in Encyclopedia of State and Law, 1925, Communist Academy] in Miéville, C., Between Equal Rights: A Marxist Theory of International Law, Leiden: Brill, 2005, 321335Google Scholar
Pecquet, A. 1738, De l’art de negocier avec les souverains, ParisGoogle Scholar
Pennell, C. R. (ed.) 1989, Piracy and Diplomacy in Seventeenth Century North Africa: The Journal of Thomas Baker. English Consul in Tripoli 1677–1685, Rutherford, NJ: Fairleigh Dickinson University PressGoogle Scholar
Pennell, C. R. 2009, ‘Treaty Law: The Extent of Consular Jurisdiction in North Africa from the Middle of the Seventeenth to the Middle of the Nineteenth Century’, Journal of North African Studies, 14:2, 235256Google Scholar
Pennell, C. R. 2010, ‘The Origins of the Foreign Jurisdiction Act and the Extension of British Sovereignty’, Historical Research, 83(221), 465485Google Scholar
Péquignot, S. & Belissa, M. 2016, ‘Thémis en diplomatie: regards croisés en guise de conclusion’, in Drocourt, N. & Schnakenbourg, E. (eds.), Thémis en diplomatie. Droits et arguments juridiques dans les relations internationales de l’Antiquité tardive à la fin du XVIIIe siècle, Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 303313Google Scholar
Perelman, M. 2000, The Invention of Capitalism: Political Economy and the Secret History of Primitive Accumulation, Durham, NC: Duke University PressGoogle Scholar
Pettigrew, W. A. & Stein, T. 2017, ‘The Public Rivalry between Regulated and Joint Stock Corporations and the Development of Seventeenth‐Century Corporate Constitutions’, Historical Research, 90(248), 341362Google Scholar
Picavet, C. G. 1923, ‘La carrière diplomatique en France au temps de Louis XIV (1661–1715)’, Revue d’histoire économique et sociale, 11(3), 383408Google Scholar
Pitts, J. 2017, ‘International Relations and the Critical History of International Law’, International Relations, 31(3), 282298Google Scholar
Pitts, J. 2018, Boundaries of the International: Law and Empire, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Platt, D. C. M. 1971, The Cinderella Service: British Consuls Since 1825, London: LongmansGoogle Scholar
Post, C. 2002, ‘Comments on the Brenner–Wood Exchange on the Low Countries’, Journal of Agrarian Change, 2(1), 8895Google Scholar
Post, C. 2011, The American Road to Capitalism: Studies in Class Structure, Economic Development and Political Conflict 1620–1877, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Post, C. 2015, ‘The Separation of the “Economic” and the “Political” under Capitalism: “Capital-centric Marxism” and the Capitalist State’, Verso Books Blog, www.versobooks.com/blogs/2345-charles-post-the-separation-of-the-economic-and-the-political-under-capitalism-capital-centric-marxism-and-the-capitalist-state [accessed 18 July 2020]Google Scholar
Poumarède, G. 2001, ‘Naissance d’une institution royale: les consuls de la nation française en Levant et en Barbarie aux XVIe et XVIIe siècles’, Annuaire-bulletin de la société de l’histoire de France, 65–128Google Scholar
Poumarède, G. 2007, ‘“Ambassade” et “Ambassadeur” dans les dictionnaires français et italiens (XVIe–XIXe siècle)’, Mélanges de l’Ecole française de Rome. Italie et Méditerranée, 119(1), 716Google Scholar
Pradells Nadal, J. 1992, Diplomacía y comercio: La expansión consular española en el siglo XVIII, Alicante: Universidad de AlicanteGoogle Scholar
Premo, B. 2017, The Enlightenment on Trial: Ordinary Litigants and Colonialism in the Spanish Empire, New York: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Premo, B. & Yanakakis, Y. 2019, ‘A Court of Sticks and Branches: Indian Jurisdiction in Colonial Mexico and Beyond’, American Historical Review, 124(1), 2855Google Scholar
Putnam, T. 2016, Courts without Borders: Law, Politics and U.S. Extraterritoriality, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Rasulov, A. 2018, ‘A Marxism for International Law: A New Agenda’, European Journal of International Law, 29(2), 631655Google Scholar
Raustiala, K. 2009, Does the Constitution Follow the Flag? The Evolution of Territoriality in American Law, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Rediker, M. 2019, ‘Afterword: Reflections on the Motley Crew as Port City Proletariat’, International Review of Social History, 64(27), 255262Google Scholar
Renouvin, P. 1954, Histoire des relations internationales (4 vols.), Paris: Librairie HachetteGoogle Scholar
Reus-Smit, C. 2016, ‘Theory, History, and Great Transformations’, International Theory, 8(3), 422435Google Scholar
Reynolds, J. 2017, Empire, Emergency and International Law, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Roberts, W. C. 2017, ‘What Was Primitive Accumulation? Reconstructing the Origin of a Critical Concept’, European Journal of Political Theory, https://journals.sagepub.com/doi/abs/10.1177/1474885117735961?journalCode=epta#articleCitationDownloadContainer [accessed 21 July 2020]Google Scholar
Ronalds, F. S. 1930, ‘The Exterritoriality of Ambassadors in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries by E. R. Adair [review]’, Journal of Modern History, 2(1), 116117Google Scholar
Roosen, W. 1973, ‘The True Ambassador: Occupational and Personal Characteristics of French Ambassadors under Louis XIV’, European History Quarterly, 3(2), 121139Google Scholar
Roosen, W. 1976, The Age of Louis XIV: The Rise of Modern Diplomacy, Cambridge, MA: SchenkmanGoogle Scholar
Roosen, W. 1980, ‘Early Modern Diplomatic Ceremonial: A Systems Approach’, Journal of Modern History, 52(3), 452476Google Scholar
Roper, L. H. & Ruymbeke, B. V. (eds.) 2007, Constructing Early Modern Empires: Proprietary Ventures in the Atlantic World, 1500–1750, Leiden: BrillGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, J. 1994, The Empire of Civil Society: A Critique of the Realist Theory of International Relations, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Rosenberg, J. 2006, ‘Why Is There No International Historical Sociology?European Journal of International Relations, 2(3), 307340Google Scholar
Rosenberg, J. 2013, ‘The “Philosophical Premises” of Uneven and Combined Development’, Review of International Studies, 39(3), 569597Google Scholar
Rosenberg, J. 2016a, ‘International Relations in the Prison of Political Science’, International Relations, 30(2), 127153Google Scholar
Rosenberg, J. 2016b, ‘Uneven and Combined Development: “The International” in Theory and History’, in Anievas, A. & Matin, K. (eds.), Historical Sociology and World History: Uneven and Combined Development over the Longue Durée, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 1730Google Scholar
Rousseau de Chamoy, L. de 1697, L’Idée du parfait ambassadeur, ed. Delavaud, L., Paris, 1912Google Scholar
Ruggie, J. G. 1983, ‘Continuity and Transformation in the World Polity: Toward a Neorealist Synthesis’, World Politics, 35(2), 261285Google Scholar
Ruggie, J. G. 1993, ‘Territoriality and Beyond: Problematizing Modernity in International Relations’, International Organization, 47(1), 139174Google Scholar
Rush, P. 1997, ‘An Altered Jurisdiction: Corporeal Traces of Law’, Griffith Law Review, 6, 144Google Scholar
Ruskola, T. 2013, Legal Orientalism: China, the United States, and Modern Law, Cambridge, MA: Harvard University PressGoogle Scholar
Ryngaert, C. 2015, Jurisdiction in International Law, 2nd ed., Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Sabaratnam, M. 2011, ‘IR in Dialogue … But Can We Change the Subjects? A Typology of Decolonising Strategies for the Study of World Politics’, Millennium: Journal of International Studies, 39(3) 781803Google Scholar
Sahlins, P. 1991, Boundaries: The Making of France and Spain in the Pyrenees Berkeley: University of California PressGoogle Scholar
Salgado, P. 2020, ‘Agency and Geopolitics: Brazilian Formal Independence and the Problem of Eurocentrism in International Historical Sociology’, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 33(3), 432451Google Scholar
Sarraz du Franquesnay, J. de la, 1731, Le Ministre Public dans les cours étrangères: Ses fonctions et ses prérogatives, Paris: Etienne GaneauGoogle Scholar
Saunders, L. 1994, ‘The Motives, Pattern and Form of Anglo-Ottoman Diplomatic Relations, c. 1580–1661’ (PhD thesis, University of Oxford)Google Scholar
Scarfi, J. P. 2017, Hidden History of International Law in the Americas, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Schick, S. 2018, Des liaisons avantageuses: Ministres, liens de dépendance et diplomatie dans le saint-empire romain germanique, Paris: Editions SorbonneGoogle Scholar
de Schepper, H. 2007, ‘The Individual on Trial in 16th Century Netherlands’, in Parker, C. H. & Bentley, J. H. (eds.), Between the Middles Ages and Modernity: Individual and Community in the Early-Modern World, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 187209Google Scholar
Schmidt, S. 2011, ‘To Order the Minds of Scholars: The Discourse of the Peace of Westphalia in International Relations Literature’, International Studies Quarterly, 55, 601623Google Scholar
Schmitt, C. 2003, The Nomos of the Earth in the International Law of the Jus Publicum Europaeum, trans. Ulmen, G. L., New York: Telos Publishing PressGoogle Scholar
Schwarzenberger, G. 1962, The Frontiers of International Law, London: Stevens & SonsGoogle Scholar
Schweizer, K. W. & Schumann, M. J. 2008, ‘The Revitalization of Diplomatic History: Renewed Reflections’, Diplomacy and Statecraft, 19, 149186Google Scholar
Schwöbel-Patel, C. 2012, ‘Whither the Private in Global Governance?’, International Journal of Constitutional Law, 10(4), 11061133Google Scholar
Scott, H. 2007, ‘Diplomatic Culture in Old Regime Europe’, in Scott, H. and Simms, B. (eds.), Cultures of Power in Europe during the Long Eighteenth Century 1680s–1815, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 5885Google Scholar
Scott, H. 2016, ‘“The Line of Descent of Nobles Is from the Blood of Kings”: Reflections on Dynastic Identity’, in Geevers, L. & Marini, M. (eds.), Dynastic Identity in Early Modern Europe: Rulers, Aristocrats and the Formation of Identities, London: Routledge, 217241Google Scholar
Scully, E. P. 2001, Bargaining with the State from Afar: American Treaty Citizenship in Treaty Port China, 1844–1942, New York: Columbia University PressGoogle Scholar
Seed, P. 2001, American Pentimiento: The Invention of Indians and the Pursuit of Riches, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota PressGoogle Scholar
Seong-Hak Kim, M. 2007, ‘Custom, Community, and the Crown: Lawyers and the Reordering of French Customary Law’, in Parker, C. H. & Bentley, J. H. (eds.), Between the Middles Ages and Modernity: Individual and Community in the Early-Modern World, Lanham, MD: Rowman & Littlefield, 169186Google Scholar
Sharpe, J. A. 2003 [1983], ‘“Such Disagreement betwyx Neighbours”: Litigation and Human Relations in Early Modern England’, in Bossy, J. (ed.), Disputes and Settlements: Law and Human Relations in the West, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 167188Google Scholar
Shaw, M. N. 2008, International Law, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Shilliam, R. 2009, German Thought and International Relations: The Rise and Fall of a Liberal Project, New York: PalgraveGoogle Scholar
Shilliam, R. 2012, ‘Forget English Freedom, Remember Atlantic Slavery: Common Law, Commercial Law, and the Significance of Slavery for Classical Political Economy’, New Political Economy, 17(5), 591609Google Scholar
Simpson, G. 2001, ‘Two Liberalisms’, European Journal of International Law, 12(3), 537571Google Scholar
Simpson, G. 2004, Great Powers and Outlaw States: Unequal Sovereigns in the International Legal Order, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Skinner, Q. 1969, ‘Meaning and Understanding in the History of Ideas’, History and Theory, 8(1), 353Google Scholar
Skinner, Q. 1978a, The Foundations of Modern Political Thought, Vol. I: The Renaissance, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Skinner, Q. 1978b, The Foundations of Modern Political Thought, Vol. II: The Age of Reformation, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Skocpol, T. 1979, States and Social Revolutions, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Skocpol, T. (ed.) 1984, Vision and Method in Historical Sociology, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Smith, D. 1991, The Rise of Historical Sociology, Cambridge: PolityGoogle Scholar
Smits, J. M. 2003, ‘Import and Export of Legal Models: The Dutch Experience’, Transnational Law Contemporary Problems, 13(2), 551574Google Scholar
Sowerby, T. A. & Hennings, J., 2017, Practices of Diplomacy in the Early Modern World c. 1410–1800, Abingdon, UK: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Stammers, N. 2009, Human Rights and Social Movements, London: PlutoGoogle Scholar
Steensgaard, N. 1967, ‘Consuls and Nations in the Levant from 1570 to 1650’, Scandinavian Economic History Review, 15(1–2), 1355Google Scholar
Steensgaard, N. 1996, ‘Consuls and Nations in the Levant from 1570 to 1650’, in Subrahmanyam, S. (ed.), Merchant Networks in the Early Modern World, 1450–1800, London: Routledge, 179221Google Scholar
Stein, T. 2012, ‘The Mediterranean in the English Empire of Trade, 1660–1748’ (PhD thesis, Harvard University)Google Scholar
Stern, P. J. 2011, The Company-State: Corporate Sovereignty and the Early Modern Foundations of the British Empire in India, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Stern, P. J. 2017, ‘Limited Liabilities: The Corporation and the Political Economy of Protection in the British Empire’, in Benton, L., Clulow, A., & Attwood, B. (eds.), Protection and Empire: A Global History, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 93113Google Scholar
Stern, S. J. 1982, Peru’s Indian Peoples and the Challenge of Spanish Conquest: Huamanga to 1640, Madison, WI: University of Wisconsin PressGoogle Scholar
Stowell, E. C. 1930, ‘The Exterritoriality of Ambassadors in the Sixteenth and Seventeenth Centuries by E. R. Adair [review]’, American Journal of International Law, 24(2), 413414Google Scholar
Studnicki-Gizbert, D. 2007, A Nation upon the Ocean Sea: Portugal’s Atlantic Diaspora and the Crisis of the Spanish Empire, 1492–1640, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Sugarman, D. (ed.) 1983, Legality, Ideology and the State, London: Academic PressGoogle Scholar
Sylvest, C. 2005, ‘Continuity and Change in British Liberal Internationalism, c. 1900–1930’, Review of International Studies, 31, 263283Google Scholar
Szigeti, P. 2019, ‘In the Middle of Nowhere: The Futile Quest to Distinguish Territoriality from Extraterritoriality’, in Margolies, D. S., Özsu, U., Pal, M., & Tzouvala, N. (eds.), The Extraterritoriality of Law: History, Theory, Politics, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 3048Google Scholar
Tait Slys, M. 2014, Exporting Legality: The Rise and Fall of Extraterritorial Jurisdiction in the Ottoman Empire and China, new ed. [online], Geneva: Graduate Institute Publications (generated 11 Sept. 2014), http://books.openedition.org/iheid/788 [accessed 28 October 2019]Google Scholar
Takeda, J. T. 2011, Between Crown and Commerce: Marseille and the Early Modern Mediterranean, Baltimore: John Hopkins University PressGoogle Scholar
Tallon, A. 2017, La France et le concile de Trente (1518–1563), 2nd ed., Rome: Bibliothèque des Écoles française d’Athènes et de RomeGoogle Scholar
Taylor, O. 2019, International Law and Revolution, Abingdon, UK: RoutledgeGoogle Scholar
Teschke, B. 2003, The Myth of 1648: Class, Geopolitics, and the Making of Modern International Relations, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Teschke, B. 2005, ‘Bourgeois Revolution, State-Formation and the Absence of the International’, Historical Materialism, 13(2), 326Google Scholar
Teschke, B. 2010, ‘Revisiting the “War-Makes-States” Thesis: War, Taxation and Social Property Relations in Early Modern Europe’, in Asbach, Olaf and Schroeder, Peter (eds.), War, the State and International Law in Seventeenth Century Europe, Aldershot: Ashgate, 3562Google Scholar
Teschke, B. 2011a, ‘Fatal Attraction: A critique of Carl Schmitt’s international political and legal theory’, International Theory, 3(2), 179227Google Scholar
Teschke, B. 2011b, ‘Decisions and Indecisions: Political and Intellectual Receptions of Carl Schmitt’, New Left Review, 67 (Jan.–Feb.), 6195Google Scholar
Teschke, B. 2017, ‘IR Theory, Historical Materialism, and the False Promise of International Historical Sociology’, Spectrum: Journal of Global Studies, 6(1), pp. 166Google Scholar
Teschke, B. forthcoming, ‘Reinterpreting the Peace of Utrecht and the Origins of the Balance of Power: A Historical Sociology of International Politics’Google Scholar
Teschke, B. & Lacher, H. 2007, ‘The Many “Logics” of Capitalist Competition’, Cambridge Review of International Affairs, 20(4), 565–80.Google Scholar
Tilley, L. Kumar, A. & Cowan, T. 2017, ‘Introduction: Enclosures and discontents’, City, 21(3–4), 420427Google Scholar
Tilly, C. 1990, Coercion, Capital, and European States, AD 990–1990, Cambridge, MA: BlackwellGoogle Scholar
Tilly, C. 1993, European Revolutions, 1492–1992, Cambridge, MA: BlackwellGoogle Scholar
Tischer, A. 2008, ‘Claude de Mesmes, Count d’Avaux (1595–1650): The Perfect Ambassador of the Early 17th Century’, International Negotiation, 13(2), 197209Google Scholar
Thompson, E. P. 1975, Whigs and Hunters: The Origin of the Black Act, New York: PantheonGoogle Scholar
Thompson, E. P. 1978, The Poverty of Theory, and Other Essays, London: MerlinGoogle Scholar
Thomson, J. E. 1994, Mercenaries, Pirates, and Sovereigns: State-Building and Extraterritorial Violence in Early Modern Europe, Princeton, NJ: Princeton University PressGoogle Scholar
Thynne, F. 1652, The perfect ambassadour treating of the antiquitie, priveledges, and behaviour of men belonging to that function (London)Google Scholar
Tomlins, C. 2010, Freedom Bound: Law, Labor and Civic Identity in colonizing English America 1580–1865, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Tomlins, C. 2016, ‘Historicism and Materiality in Legal Theory’, In Del Mar, Maksymilian & Lobban, Michael (eds.), Law, Theory and History: New Essays on a Neglected Dialogue, Oxford Hart Publishing, 5783Google Scholar
Traverso, E. 2016, Left-Wing Melancholia: Marxism, History, and Memory, New York: Columbia University PressGoogle Scholar
Trivellato, F. 2009, The Familiarity of Strangers: The Sephardic Diaspora, Livorno, and Cross-Cultural Trade in Early Modern Period, New Haven, CT: Yale University PressGoogle Scholar
Tuck, R. 1999, The Rights of War and Peace. Political Thought and the International Legal Order from Grotius to Kant, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Turgeon, N. 2016, ‘Revisiting Imperial China’s Trajectory in the Context of the “Rise of the West”. The Eurocentric Legacy in Historical Sociology’ (PhD thesis, University of Sussex)Google Scholar
Tzouvala, N. 2020, Capitalism as Civilisation: A History of International Law, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Ulbert, J. 2006, ‘Introduction: La fonction consulaire a l’epoque modern définition, état des connaissances et perspectives de recherche’, in Ulbert, J. & Le Bouëdec, G. (eds.), La fonction consulaire à l’époque moderne: L’affirmation d’une institution économique et politique (1500–1800), Rennes: Presses Universitaires de Rennes, 920Google Scholar
Ulbert, J. 2016, ‘L'histoire de la fonction consulaire jusqu'au début de la première guerre mondiale: une bibliographie’, Cahiers de la Méditerranée, 93Google Scholar
Ulbert, J. 2018, ‘Les manuels consulaires français d’avant 1914 comme source des études consulaires’, in Bartolomei, A., Calafat, G., Grenet, M., & Ulbert, J. (eds.), De l’utilité commerciale des consuls: L’institution consulaire et les marchands dans le monde méditerranéen (XVIIe–XXe siècle), Rome: Publications de l’École française de Rome, 117140Google Scholar
Ulbert, J. 2019, ‘L’origine géographique des consuls français sous Louis XIV’, Cahiers de la Méditerranée, 98, 1127Google Scholar
Ulbert, J. forthcoming, ‘Identifier pour contrôler. La monarchie française et ses ressortissants expatriés (XVIIe–XVIIIe siècle)’, Mélanges de la Casa de VelásquezGoogle Scholar
Ulbert, J. & Le Bouëdec, G. (eds.) 2006, La fonction consulaire à l’époque moderne: L’affirmation d’une institution économique et politique (1500–1800), Rennes: Presses Universitaires de RennesGoogle Scholar
Vergerio, C. 2018, ‘Context, Reception, and the Study of Great Thinkers in International Relations’, International Theory, 11(1), 110137Google Scholar
Vergerio, C. 2019, ‘System, Order, and International Law: The Early History of International Legal Thought from Machiavelli to Hegel, ed. Kadelbach, Stefan, Kleinlein, Thomas, & Roth-Isigkeit, David’, Journal of the History of International Law/Revue d’histoire du droit international, 21(2), 331335Google Scholar
Vitalis, R. 2015, White World Order, Black Power Politics, Ithaca, NY: Cornell University PressGoogle Scholar
Vries, Jan de & van der Woude, A. 1997, The First Modern Economy: Success, Failure, and Perseverance of the Dutch Economy, 1500–1815, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Wallenius, T. 2019, ‘The Case for a History of Global Legal Practices’, European Journal of International Relations, 25(1), 108130Google Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1974, The Modern World-System I: Capitalist Agriculture and the Origins of the European World-Economy in the Sixteenth Century, New York: Academic PressGoogle Scholar
Wallerstein, I. 1997, ‘Eurocentrism and Its Avatars: The Dilemmas of Social Science’, New Left Review, I(226), 93107Google Scholar
Warrington, R. 1983, ‘Pashukanis and the Commodity Form Theory’, in Sugarman, D. (ed.), Legality, Ideology and the State, London: Academic Press, 4367Google Scholar
Watkins, J. 2008, ‘Toward a New Diplomatic History of Medieval and Early Modern Europe’, Journal of Medieval and Early Modern Studies, 38(1), 114Google Scholar
Watson, A. 1982, Diplomacy: The Dialogue between States, London: MethuenGoogle Scholar
Watson, A. 1995, ‘From Legal Transplants to Legal Formants’, American Journal of Comparative Law, 43(3), 469476Google Scholar
Weber, M. 1949, Methodology of the Social Sciences, Glencoe, IL: Free PressGoogle Scholar
Weckmann, L. 1969, ‘The Middle Ages in the Conquest of America’, in Hanke, Lewis (ed.), History of Latin American Civilization, Volume 1 – The Colonial Experience, London: MethuenGoogle Scholar
Werner, M. & Zimmermann, B. 2006, ‘Beyond Comparison: Histoire Croisée and the Challenge of Reflexivity’, History and Theory, 45(1), 3050Google Scholar
Weststeijn, A. 2015, ‘‘Love Alone Is Not Enough’: Treaties in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Colonial Expansion’, in Belmessous, Saliha (ed.) Native Claims: Indigenous Law against Empire 1500–1920, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 1944Google Scholar
Weststeijn, A. 2017, ‘Provincializing Grotius: International Law and Empire in a Seventeenth Century Malay Mirror’, in Koskenniemi, M., Rech, W., & Jimenez Fonseca, M. (eds.), International Law and Empire: Historical Explorations, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2156Google Scholar
Whittle, J. 2000, The Development of Agrarian Capitalism: Land and Labour in Norfolk 1440–1580, Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Wicquefort, Abraham de 1681, L’ambassadeur et ses fonctions. The Hague: Chez Jean & Daniel SteuckerGoogle Scholar
Wieacker, F. 1995, A History of Private Law in Europe, Oxford: Clarendon PressGoogle Scholar
Wight, M. 1977, Systems of States, Leicester: Leicester University PressGoogle Scholar
Windler, C. 2017a ‘Afterword: From social status to sovereignty – practices of foreign relations from the Renaissance to the Sattelzeit’, in Sowerby, T. A. & Hennings, J. (eds.), Practices of Diplomacy in the Early Modern World c. 1410–1800, Abingdon, UK: Routledge, 254265Google Scholar
Windler, C. 2017b, ‘Towards the Empire of a “Civilizing Nation”: The French Revolution and Its Impact on relations with the Ottoman Regencies in the Maghreb’, in Koskenniemi, M., Rech, W., & Jimenez Fonseca, M. (eds.), International Law and Empire: Historical Explorations, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 202223Google Scholar
Wood, A. C. 1935, A History of the Levant Company, Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Wood, E. M. 1981, ‘The Separation of the Economic and the Political in Capitalism’, New Left Review, 127Google Scholar
Wood, E. M. 1983, ‘The State and Popular Sovereignty in French Political Thought: A Genealogy of Rousseau’s “General Will”’, History of Political Thought, 4(2), 281315Google Scholar
Wood, E. M. 1992 [2015], A Pristine Culture of Capitalism, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Wood, E. M. 1995, Democracy against Capitalism: Renewing Historical Materialism, Cambridge: Cambridge University PressGoogle Scholar
Wood, E. M. 2001, ‘Eurocentric Anti-Eurocentrism’, Against the Current, 92 (May–June), https://solidarity-us.org/atc/92/p993 [accessed 28 October 2019]Google Scholar
Wood, E. M. 2002a, The Origin of Capitalism: A Longer View, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Wood, E. M. 2002b, ‘The Question of Market Dependence’, Journal of Agrarian Change, 2(1), 5087Google Scholar
Wood, E. M. 2003, Empire of Capital, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Wood, E. M. 2008, Citizens to Lords: A Social History of Western Political Thought from Antiquity to the Middle Ages, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Wood, E. M. 2012, Liberty and Property: A Social History of Western Political Thought from Renaissance to Enlightenment, London: VersoGoogle Scholar
Wood, E. M. 2016, ‘Britain versus France: How Many Sonderwegs?’, Historical Materialism, 24(1), 1129Google Scholar
Wood, E. M. & Wood, N. 1997, A Trumpet of Sedition: Political Theory and the Rise of Capitalism 1509–1688, London: Pluto PressGoogle Scholar
Wright Mills, C. 1959, The Sociological Imagination, Oxford: Oxford University PressGoogle Scholar
Yannakakis, Y. 2013, ‘Indigenous People and Legal Culture in Spanish America’, History Compass 11(11), 931947Google Scholar
Zourek, J. 1957, ‘Histoire des relations consulaires’, Revue de droit international pour le Moyen-Orient, 6, 194Google Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure [email protected] is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Maïa Pal, Oxford Brookes University
  • Book: Jurisdictional Accumulation
  • Online publication: 15 October 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108684538.010
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Maïa Pal, Oxford Brookes University
  • Book: Jurisdictional Accumulation
  • Online publication: 15 October 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108684538.010
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Maïa Pal, Oxford Brookes University
  • Book: Jurisdictional Accumulation
  • Online publication: 15 October 2020
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781108684538.010
Available formats
×