The King’s Peace
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Lisa Ford
About this book
How the imposition of Crown rule across the British Empire during the Age of Revolution corroded the rights of British subjects and laid the foundations of the modern police state.
During the eighteenth and nineteenth centuries, the British Empire responded to numerous crises in its colonies, from North America to Jamaica, Bengal to New South Wales. This was the Age of Revolution, and the Crown, through colonial governors, tested an array of coercive peacekeeping methods in a desperate effort to maintain control. In the process these leaders transformed what it meant to be a British subject.
In the decades after the American Revolution, colonial legal regimes were transformed as the king’s representatives ruled new colonies with an increasingly heavy hand. These new autocratic regimes blurred the lines between the rule of law and the rule of the sword. Safeguards of liberty and justice, developed in the wake of the Glorious Revolution, were eroded while exacting obedience and imposing order became the focus of colonial governance. In the process, many constitutional principles of empire were subordinated to a single, overarching rule: where necessary, colonial law could diverge from metropolitan law. Within decades of the American Revolution, Lisa Ford shows, the rights claimed by American rebels became unthinkable in the British Empire. Some colonial subjects fought back but, in the empire, the real winner of the American Revolution was the king.
In tracing the dramatic growth of colonial executive power and the increasing deployment of arbitrary policing and military violence to maintain order, The King’s Peace provides important lessons on the relationship between peacekeeping, sovereignty, and political subjectivity—lessons that illuminate contemporary debates over the imbalance between liberty and security.
Reviews
-- Maxwell Carter Wall Street Journal
-- Nancy Christie American Historical Review
-- Dana Rabin H-Net Reviews
-- Haimo Li Journal of British Studies
-- Venkat Iyer Round Table
-- Eliga H. Gould, author of Among the Powers of the Earth: The American Revolution and the Making of a New World Empire
-- Paul D. Halliday, author of Habeas Corpus: From England to Empire
-- Hannah Weiss Muller, author of Subjects and Sovereign: Bonds of Belonging in the Eighteenth-Century British Empire
-- Aaron Graham, author of Corruption, Party, and Government in Britain, 1702–1713
-- Philip J. Stern, author of The Company-State: Corporate Sovereignty and the Early Modern Foundations of the British Empire in India
Topics
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Frontmatter
i -
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Contents
vii -
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Introduction: The King’s Colonial Peace and Its Legacies
1 -
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1. A Peaceable Riot in Boston
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2. A Military Assassination in Montréal
58 -
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3. War and Peace in Trelawny Town
100 -
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4. A Treachery of Spies in Hooghly
137 -
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5. Bush, Town, and Crown in New South Wales
176 -
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Conclusion: Small Stories and the Transformation of Empire
218 -
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Notes
235 -
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Acknowledgments
311 -
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Index
313