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A Jurisprudence of Power

Victorian Empire and the Rule of Law

R.W. Kostal (Professor of Law and History, University of Western Ontario)

$413

Hardback

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English
Oxford Academic (not OTO)
06 January 2006
A Jurisprudence of Power concerns the brutal suppression under martial law of the Jamaica uprising of 1865, and the explosive debate and litigation these events spawned in England. The book explores the centrality of

legal ideas and institutions in English politics, and of political ideas that give rise to great questions of English law. It documents how the world's most powerful and articulate political elite struggled with fundamental questions about law, morality, and power. Can a constitutional state rule a sprawling empire without breaking faith with the rule of law?

Can it contend with the violent resistance of subjugated peoples without corrupting the integrity of its legal and political ideals? The book addresses these questions as it reconstructs the most prolonged and important conflict over martial law and the rule of law in the history of England

in the nineteenth century.

By:  
Imprint:   Oxford Academic (not OTO)
Country of Publication:   United Kingdom
Dimensions:   Height: 242mm,  Width: 163mm,  Spine: 35mm
Weight:   969g
ISBN:   9780198260769
ISBN 10:   0198260768
Series:   Oxford Studies in Modern Legal History
Publication Date:  
Audience:   College/higher education ,  Further / Higher Education
Format:   Hardback
Publisher's Status:   Active

Reviews for A Jurisprudence of Power: Victorian Empire and the Rule of Law

..a brilliantly timed monograph..it provides a wonderful way into the actual operation of the law of empire and that law's troubled place in Anglo-American constitutionalism..helps to make sense of critical features of twenty-first century American legal debates. Kostal's book does this beautifully. It deserves a large audience. John Witt, Harvard Law Review ...much that is revealing emerges in Kostal s tracing of these events...Arguably the most important thing about the Jamaica Committee was not its methods or their outcome but its crystallisation of a clutch of issues which have changed in shape but not in essence in the intervening years. Law and order are still not the same thing. Lord Justice Stephen Sedley, London Review of Books 'I have no hesitation in saying that Professor Kostal is among the very best scholars of the legal history of the Victorian era. [He is] a legal historian who is an exhaustive researcher. The breadth of the material he interrogates is quite astounding prodigious and thorough.' Professor John McLaren The book makes a significant contribution to both Victorian and imperial historiography. [It] is based on remarkable historical and legal research that synthesizes law and history in brilliant fashion. A Jurisprudence of Power offers a richly textured and carefully nuanced study of the oft-quoted 'rule of law', ...Drawing on an impressive and diverse range of published and manuscript sources, and presented in crisp and compelling prose, A Jurisprudence of Power exposes the contradictions which threatened the application of English law in a colonial context...Kostal has..made a significant contribution to the history of English law. Canadian Historical Association [An] excellent book...[that] is an important injection of law into both the imperial history and British political history of the late-nineteenth century. The Cambridge Law Journal, Volume 66/2


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