Criminal Law Legal History

The Slave Trade, Abolition and the Long History of International Criminal Law: The Recaptive and the Victim

By Emily Haslam
Routledge October 2019

Specifications

ISBN-13
9781138348899
Publisher
Routledge
Publication
October 2019
Format
Hardback
Jurisdiction
U.K. ? Countri(es) for reference only

Details

Modern international criminal law typically traces its origins to the 20th century Nuremberg and Tokyo trials, excluding the slave trade and abolition. Yet, as this book shows, the slave trade and abolition resound in international criminal law in multiple ways. Its central focus lies in a close examination of the often-controversial litigation, in the first part of the nineteenth century, arising from British efforts to capture slave ships, much of it before Mixed Commissions. With archival-based research into this litigation, it explores the legal construction of so-called ‘recaptives’ (slaves found on board captured slave ships). The book argues that, notwithstanding its promise of freedom, the law actually constructed recaptives restrictively. In particular, it focused on questions of intervention rather than recaptives’ rights. At the same time it shows how a critical reading of the archive reveals that recaptives contributed to litigation in important, but hitherto largely unrecognized, ways. The book is, however, not simply a contribution to the history of international law. Efforts to deliver justice through international criminal law continue to face considerable challenges and raise testing questions about the construction – and alternative construction – of victims.

By inscribing the recaptive in international criminal legal history, the book offers an original contribution to these contentious issues and a reflection on critical international criminal legal history writing and its accompanying methodological and political choices.

Table of Contents

1. Rethinking International Criminal Legal History
2. Where It All Began: Prize
3. The Piracy Analogy and the Slave Trade
4. Mixed Commissions and the Expansion of Intervention
5. After Seizure: The Hazards of Recaptivity
6. Prize, Property and the Economies of Slave Trade Repression
7. Back to the Present: Recaptives, Victims and Creditors
8. Conclusion
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