Western Legal Imperialism: Thinking About the Deep Historical Roots
Abstract We live in an age of massive efforts to transplant Western institutions. Some of those efforts have involved the so-called "Washington Consensus"; some have involved International Human Rights; but all of them have brought the West to the rest of the world, and all of them reflect...
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Veröffentlicht in: | Theoretical Inquiries in Law 2009-06, Vol.10 (2), p.15-332 |
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Zusammenfassung: | Abstract
We live in an age of massive efforts to transplant Western institutions.
Some of those efforts have involved the so-called "Washington
Consensus"; some have involved International Human Rights; but
all of them have brought the West to the rest of the world, and all of
them reflect a kind of missionary drive. What are the historical sources
of this legal missionizing? This Article argues that those sources long
predate the twentieth century, and indeed long predate the colonial
adventures that began in the sixteenth century. Western law was already
culturally predisposed to spread well before Iberian ships reached the
Americas. In particular, Western law began, in antiquity, as city-state
law, and only gradually penetrated the countryside. This colonization
of the countryside by the cities took place partly under the influence
of Christianity. It also reflected a centrally important event in the
development of Western law: the great northward shift of the center
of gravity of Western culture from the Mediterranean to trans-alpine
Europe, which we can roughly date to 700-1000 C.E. The long, slow
internal colonization of the countryside in the West set much of the
pattern for the external colonization of the non-Western world that
eventually commenced in the sixteenth century.
Recommended Citation
Whitman, James Q.
(2009)
"Western Legal Imperialism: Thinking About the Deep Historical Roots,"
Theoretical Inquiries in Law:
Vol. 10
:
No.
2, Article 15.
Available at: http://www.bepress.com/til/default/vol10/iss2/art15 |
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ISSN: | 1565-3404 1565-3404 |
DOI: | 10.2202/1565-3404.1218 |