Introduction: Social Science and Empire: A Durable Tension, Jeremy Adelman (Princeton University, USA) 1. Campillo’s Theory of Commercial Empire: Political Economy and Commercial Reform in the Spanish Empire, Fidel Tavarez, (University of Chicago, USA) 2. Poor Mao’s Almanack? Empire, Political Economy, and the Transformation of Social Science, Sophus A. Reinert, (Harvard University, USA) 3. Utilitarianism and the Question of Free Labor in Russia and India in the Eighteenth Century, Alessandro Stanziani, (EHESS, Paris, France) 4. Geography and the Reshaping of the Modern Chinese Empire, Shellen Wu, (University of Tennessee, USA) 5. The Periphery’s Order: Opium and Moral Wreckage in British Burma, Diana Kim, (Georgetown University, USA) 6. Custom in the Archive: The Birth of Modern Chinese Law at the End of Empire, Matthew Erie, (Oxford University, UK) 7. Nitobe Inazo and the Diffusion of a Knowledgeable Empire, Alexis Dudden, (University of Connecticut, USA) 8. Modern Imperialism and International Law, Josh Derman, (Hong Kong University of Science and Technology, China) 9. Knowledge as Power: Internationalism, Information, and US Global Ambitions, David Ekbladh, (Tufts University, USA) 10. American Hegemony, the Rockefeller Foundation, and the Rise of Academic International Relations in the US, Inderjeet Parmar, (City, University of London, UK) 11. Circumventing Imperialism: Latin American Social Sciences and the Making of a Global Order, 1944-1971, Margarita Fajardo, (Sarah Lawrence College, USA) 12. Western International Theory, 1492-2010: Performing Western Supremacy and Western Imperialism, John M. Hobson, (University of Sheffield, UK) Index
An exploration into how the social sciences and their intellectuals were entangled in the rise and fall of empires, asking classical questions about empire-building and examining the role of ideas, experts, and expertise in their creation.
Jeremy Adelman is Henry Charles Lea Professor of History and Director of the Global History Lab at Princeton University, USA. He has been the recipient of the Guggenheim Memorial Foundation Fellowship and the ACLS Frederick Burkhardt Fellowship, as well as recognitions for his pioneering teaching at Princeton. Chair of the Princeton History Department for the last four years, he is also the founder of the Council for International Teaching and Research.
This superb compilation of essays situates the history of the
social sciences from the 18th century onward in the contexts of
various imperial formations. It provides us with rich accounts of
how the social sciences were shaped by diverse forms of imperial
order while at the same time they also contributed to shaping them.
Authored by an international group of leading scholars, all essays
manage to combine global historical questions with due attention to
local contexts. The book crosses many academic disciplines, and it
fills an important gap in the currently available literature on the
global history of knowledge in general and the social sciences in
particular.
*Dominic Sachsenmaier, Professor of Global History,
Georg-August-University Göttingen, Germany*
The foundational moment of the modern social sciences in the 19th
century coincided with a time of empire. Imperial logics, mostly
implicitly, seeped into the terms and categories that social
scientists use. It is high time to de-imperialize the social
sciences. This book makes important strides towards a critique of
what we could call, for want of a better term, 'methodological
imperialism.'
*Sebastian Conrad, Professor of Global History, Freie Universität
Berlin, Germany*
An excellent book for scholars of expertise, empire, and global
history alike.
*Isis Journal*
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