International audienceThis volume offers two important contributions to the literature on sovereign debt. First, it provides a unique genealogy of debt collection practices in terms of their availability, acceptability and efficacy. We argue that creditors’ tactics and methods to enforce debt repayment emerged and solidified to a large extent in relation to the threads of colonial history, from the building of empires to the decolonisation era. Second, this volume reflects critically on the relevance of neo-colonial interpretations in recent cases of sovereign debt dispute
In reaction to defaults on sovereign debt contracts, issuers and creditors have strengthened the ter...
How does sovereign debt emerge? In the early nineteenth century, intermediaries ' market power ...
This paper surveys the literature on sovereign debt that deals with the issues of a country’s abilit...
International audienceThis volume offers two important contributions to the literature on sovereign ...
This volume offers two important contributions to the literature on sovereign debt. First, it provid...
International audienceDuring the nineteenth century, free trade and financial integration contribute...
FROM THE EDITOR’S INTRODUCTION: In Debt as Power, Di Muzio and Robbins present a historical account ...
Combining legal interpretation with political science analysis, this Article highlights the competin...
Conventional wisdom holds that all nations must repay debt. Regardless of the legitimacy of the regi...
The traditional view of sovereign debt as a relationship between a developing country government and...
West Africa has been neglected in literature on sovereign debt before 1914. However, it presented ar...
Lienau’s book on ‘Rethinking Sovereign Debt’ delves into international finance to shed light on its ...
This paper provides a relatively non-technical survey of theoretical research on the e¤ect of sovere...
This thesis examines how sovereign lending, i.e. the practice of lending capital to sovereigns, has ...
The doctrine of odious debts came into its full in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to de...
In reaction to defaults on sovereign debt contracts, issuers and creditors have strengthened the ter...
How does sovereign debt emerge? In the early nineteenth century, intermediaries ' market power ...
This paper surveys the literature on sovereign debt that deals with the issues of a country’s abilit...
International audienceThis volume offers two important contributions to the literature on sovereign ...
This volume offers two important contributions to the literature on sovereign debt. First, it provid...
International audienceDuring the nineteenth century, free trade and financial integration contribute...
FROM THE EDITOR’S INTRODUCTION: In Debt as Power, Di Muzio and Robbins present a historical account ...
Combining legal interpretation with political science analysis, this Article highlights the competin...
Conventional wisdom holds that all nations must repay debt. Regardless of the legitimacy of the regi...
The traditional view of sovereign debt as a relationship between a developing country government and...
West Africa has been neglected in literature on sovereign debt before 1914. However, it presented ar...
Lienau’s book on ‘Rethinking Sovereign Debt’ delves into international finance to shed light on its ...
This paper provides a relatively non-technical survey of theoretical research on the e¤ect of sovere...
This thesis examines how sovereign lending, i.e. the practice of lending capital to sovereigns, has ...
The doctrine of odious debts came into its full in the eighteenth and early nineteenth century to de...
In reaction to defaults on sovereign debt contracts, issuers and creditors have strengthened the ter...
How does sovereign debt emerge? In the early nineteenth century, intermediaries ' market power ...
This paper surveys the literature on sovereign debt that deals with the issues of a country’s abilit...