Most studies on Imperial China’s reception of international law in the nineteenth century debate about how much China integrated international law as guidance for its state behavior. Some scholars argue that Imperial China’s reception of international law was only for the sake of survival. China adhered to international law out of consideration of expediency. Chinese officials’ reference to China’s traditional rights and culture seemed to further suggest that the violent encounter between Imperial China and Western states in the nineteenth century was the result of cultural incommensurability. The present study uses archival research to find out the answer to Imperial China’s reception of international law. By looking into the archives of...
This thesis is a study of the diplomacy of China in its quest for sovereignty integrity from 1912 to...
During the second half of the 19th century, the Qing Dynasty came into diplomatic conflict with the ...
When and how did international law become a universal order applicable to all states on the earth? ...
Sovereignty has been a fundamental concept in the modern history of the normative order of Western s...
This book provides a comprehensive history of the emergence and the formation of the concept of sove...
China’s approaches to international law are an example of non-Western peoples’ perspectives towards ...
In nineteenth-century positivist international law, the language of "civilization," deploy...
Until the late nineteenth century, the history of international law was remarkably Eurocentric. In t...
The Treaty of Saigon, signed on March 15, 1874, stated that Vietnam recognized the full sovereignty ...
This article attempts to explain why China-Vietnam relations, which were based on tributary ties, ...
Historically, Chinese legal governance has been through criminal codes that specify punishments for ...
The results of the Treaty of Tientsin, concluded in June of 1885, which put an end to the Sino-Frenc...
The 1874 and 1898 Siming gongsuo riots were two violent conflicts that occurred between a local comm...
In the present monographs an attempt is made to study certain problems of international law with ref...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
This thesis is a study of the diplomacy of China in its quest for sovereignty integrity from 1912 to...
During the second half of the 19th century, the Qing Dynasty came into diplomatic conflict with the ...
When and how did international law become a universal order applicable to all states on the earth? ...
Sovereignty has been a fundamental concept in the modern history of the normative order of Western s...
This book provides a comprehensive history of the emergence and the formation of the concept of sove...
China’s approaches to international law are an example of non-Western peoples’ perspectives towards ...
In nineteenth-century positivist international law, the language of "civilization," deploy...
Until the late nineteenth century, the history of international law was remarkably Eurocentric. In t...
The Treaty of Saigon, signed on March 15, 1874, stated that Vietnam recognized the full sovereignty ...
This article attempts to explain why China-Vietnam relations, which were based on tributary ties, ...
Historically, Chinese legal governance has been through criminal codes that specify punishments for ...
The results of the Treaty of Tientsin, concluded in June of 1885, which put an end to the Sino-Frenc...
The 1874 and 1898 Siming gongsuo riots were two violent conflicts that occurred between a local comm...
In the present monographs an attempt is made to study certain problems of international law with ref...
This is the author accepted manuscript. The final version is available from the publisher via the DO...
This thesis is a study of the diplomacy of China in its quest for sovereignty integrity from 1912 to...
During the second half of the 19th century, the Qing Dynasty came into diplomatic conflict with the ...
When and how did international law become a universal order applicable to all states on the earth? ...