Keally McBride is Professor of Politics at the University of San Francisco.
"""What [McBride] has done is written a superb and evocative book that will enrich existing scholarship on colonial practice and deepen understandings of the rule of law and its many dimensions and pitfalls."" -- Theory & Event ""Keally McBride has written a brilliant and important book that takes head-on our sacrosanct myth of 'the rule of law' by means of a sustained and deeply historical analysis of nineteenth century British colonial rule. This is a formative book that challenges and surely will reshape the way we understand the rule of law-no longer as that monolithic, straightforward panacea to our political problems, but instead as a strategic, complex, and shrewd weapon of political struggle, an instrument of politics that is deployed in myriad ways to achieve ends both noble and ignoble: a chameleon-like apparatus embedded in relations of power, a political device that more than anything calls, in McBride's words, 'for humility above all.' I can't wait to engage the debates that it will spawn."" -- Bernard E. Harcourt, Isidor and Seville Sulzbacher Professor of Law, Professor of Political Science, and Director, Columbia Center for Contemporary Critical Thought, Columbia University ""In Mr. Mothercountry, Keally McBride has done something extraordinary. She discovered an administrator of the British empire-James Stephen-who not only promoted the rule of law, but could also be said to have invented it. Stephen was a true believer and sought to create transparent, clear and fair rules in the British colonies that he helped to oversee. Mr. Mothercountry speaks both to the possibilities inherit in the concept of the rule of law as well as its limitations, the way that it readily gets hijacked by imperial and commercial interests, and the impossibility of keeping it purely neutral and non-arbitrary. This book is a tour de force, required reading for anyone interested in the colonial origins of an idea that remains a central aspect of the way that contemporary states view themselves and their connection to law and sustaining forms of political authority."" --James Martel, author of The One and Only Law: Walter Benjamin and the Second Commandment ""This beautifully written book bores into the complicated relationship between the rule of law and imperial governance by focusing on the life and work of colonial administrator and author, James Stephen. In its exceptional braiding of historical detail, context, close reading, and conceptual sophistication, Mr. Mothercountry brings the past to bear on our contemporary condition in a manner that is both illuminating and troubling. McBride's book thus enriches significantly the growing body of scholarship on the long and troubled entanglements of imperialism, sovereignty, liberalism, hierarchy, and the practical and theoretical workings of the law."" --Jeanne Morefield, author of Empires without Imperialism: Anglo-American Decline and the Politics of Deflection ""What [the author] has done is written a superb and evocative book that will enrich existing scholarship on colonial practice and deepen understandings of the rule of law and its many dimensions and pitfalls."" - Craog Borowiak, Project Muse, Theory & Event"