Date: 2007
Type: Working Paper
The Reframing of Law’s Imperial Frame: An Analysis of Jim Tully’s Theory of Post-Colonial Empire
Working Paper, EUI LAW, 2007/15
WALKER, Neil, The Reframing of Law’s Imperial Frame: An Analysis of Jim Tully’s Theory of Post-Colonial Empire, EUI LAW, 2007/15 - https://hdl.handle.net/1814/6859
Retrieved from Cadmus, EUI Research Repository
This paper provides a constructive critique of Jim Tully's innovative body of work on
the juridical nature of 'empire' in its contemporary post-colonial phase. Tully's work
emphasizes the high degree of continuity between the legal articulation of classical
imperial power relations and the contemporary settlement, even though that settlement
is mediated through a much more developed and notionally egalitarian framework of
international and transnational law. The present author accepts much of Tully's critique,
but urges that space must be retained within any explanatory scheme for the
reconstitutive and transformative potential of law, even if that law cannot be
hermetically sealed off from its imperial legacy
Cadmus permanent link: https://hdl.handle.net/1814/6859
ISSN: 1725-6739
Series/Number: EUI LAW; 2007/15
Publisher: European University Institute
Keyword(s): Governance Power analysis Globalization Sovereignty Protest Civil society