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Learning Western Techniques of Empire: Republican China and the New Legal Framework for Managing Tibet

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  29 August 2017

Abstract

At the end of the nineteenth century, China found itself torn between its imperial past and its nation-state future. By the time it became a Republic in 1911, China had to redefine its territory in new national sovereign terms. Until then its territory had been inscribed in more malleable frontiers and boundaries within the normative framework of the so-called ‘tribute system’. The article shows how, applying the new legal techniques of empire learned from the West, the Chinese central government, wherever possible, attempted to expand its new sovereign domain in territories like Tibet, Xinjiang, and Mongolia, where, according to international law, all the prerequisites existed for national self-determination and independence. In the context of opposing British and Tibetan claims, the Chinese appropriation of international law in the Republican period (1911–1949) helped China not only to assert itself in the international domain as a sovereign state, defending itself against Western imperialism, but also to pursue its own fictional imperial claims over Tibet, without which the Communists’ ‘liberation’ of Tibet would have not been possible. The paper highlights the interplay of imperial techniques based on international law, the relativity of this legal language, and how the strategies of empire are not only a prerogative of the West, but can be quickly adopted by those who have been subjected to them, resulting in a vicious circle.

Type
INTERNATIONAL LEGAL THEORY: Symposium: Law between Global and Colonial: Techniques of Empire
Copyright
Copyright © Foundation of the Leiden Journal of International Law 2017 

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References

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34 Agreement between the Ministers Plenipotentiary of the Governments of Great Britain and China, in W.F. Mayers, Treaties between the Empire of China and Foreign Powers, together with Regulations for the conduct of foreign trade, conventions, agreements, regulations, etc., (1906), 44, at 48.

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66 FO 371/1609, 1257, 23 December 1912.

67 FO 371/1609, 9017, 4 February 1913.

68 Ibid.

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71 Ibid.

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94 FO 371/35755, 1811/40/10, 1943. The general attitude of the British Foreign Office with regard to the Chinese suzerainty over Tibet is also dealt in the Viceroy of India's Telegram No. 864-S of 31 March 1943.

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97 Wu, supra note 96, at 193.

98 893.00 Tibet/70 The British Embassy to the Department of State, in United States Department of State/ Foreign relations of the United States: diplomatic papers, 1943, China, 634–6.

99 740.0011 Pacific War/3272, United States Department of State/ Foreign relations of the United States: diplomatic papers, 1943, China, 641–2.

100 711. 93 Tibet/1-1347, 13 January 1947, United States Department of State/ Foreign relations of the United States: diplomatic papers, 1947, China, 589–91.

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103 Ibid.

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105 See Li, supra note 8, at 174.

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108 As the historian, Odd Arne Westad noticed, with regard to China today: ‘the central problem for China's foreign affairs in the future is that it is an enduring empire that increasingly behaves like a modern nation state’. O.A. Westad, Restless Empire. China and the World since 1750 (2012), 441.

109 J. Wang, The historical status of China's Tibet (1997).

110 Ibid., at 185.

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