
America's Empire Expanded Dramatically Following The Spanish-american War Of 1898. The United States Quickly Annexed The Philippines And Puerto Rico, Seized Control Over Cuba And The Panama Canal Zone, And Extended Political And Financial Power Throughout Latin America. This Age Of Empire, Benjamin Allen Coates Argues, Was Also An Age Of International Law. Justifying America's Empire With The Language Of Law And Civilization, International Lawyers-serving Simultaneously As Academics, Leaders Of The Legal Profession, Corporate Attorneys, And High-ranking Government Officials-became Central To The Conceptualization, Conduct, And Rationalization Of Us Foreign Policy. Just As International Law Shaped Empire, So Too Did Empire Shape International Law. Legalist Empire Shows How The American Society Of International Law Was Animated By The Same Notions Of Civilization That Justified The Expansion Of Empire Overseas. Using The Private Papers And Published Writings Of Such Figures As Elihu Root, John Bassett Moore, And James Brown Scott, Coates Shows How The Newly-created International Law Profession Merged European Influences With Trends In American Jurisprudence, While Appealing To Elite Notions Of Order, Reform, And American Identity. By Projecting An Image Of The United States As A Unique Force For Law And Civilization, Legalists Reconciled American Exceptionalism, Empire, And An International Rule Of Law. Under Their Influence The Nation Became The World's Leading Advocate For The Creation Of An International Court. Although The Legalist Vision Of World Peace Through Voluntary Adjudication Foundered In The Interwar Period, International Lawyers-through Their Ideas And Their Presence In Halls Of Power-continue To Infuse Vital Debates About America's Global Role
How did the intersection of international law and American imperial expansion shape the United States' global identity and foreign policy at the turn of the 20th century? Benjamin Allen Coates, a historian of U.S. foreign relations, examines the pivotal role of international lawyers in legitimizing American expansionism following the Spanish-American War. By analyzing the dual identities of these professionals as both academics and government officials, Coates argues that the development of international law was inextricably linked to the project of American empire-building. The text posits that these legalists reconciled the tension between American exceptionalism and the desire for a global rule of law by framing U.S. power as a civilizing force.
What You Will Find
Scope Limits
Scholars recognize this work as a significant contribution to the history of international relations and the sociology of the legal profession. Readers frequently note the academic density of the prose, which provides a rigorous examination of how legal theory was utilized to justify geopolitical expansion.
Page Count:
352
Publication Date:
2016-01-01
Publisher:
Oxford University Press
ISBN-10:
0190495960
ISBN-13:
9780190495961
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