Contents
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Treaties in Theory: Between Skepticism, Reason of State, and International Law Treaties in Theory: Between Skepticism, Reason of State, and International Law
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Treaties in Practice: Enforcing Obligation by Consent Treaties in Practice: Enforcing Obligation by Consent
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Conclusion: The Erasmian Paradox Conclusion: The Erasmian Paradox
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Bibliography Bibliography
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2 “Love Alone is not Enough”: Treaties in Seventeenth-Century Dutch Colonial Expansion
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Published:November 2014
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Abstract
Dutch colonial expansion from the late sixteenth century onward was characterized by continuous attempts at treaty making with indigenous peoples. This chapter discusses the intellectual and practical background to this dominance of treaties, focusing on the colonial involvement of Hugo Grotius and the rise of Dutch power in Southeast Asia in the opening decades of the seventeenth century. The chapter argues that treaty making developed out of a fundamental reassessment of the role of recognition, consent, and obligation in international relations. The aim was to make agreements, and the keeping of agreements, into the foundational backbone of a legal international order. In colonial practice the paradoxical consequence of formalizing such mutual recognition was that the Dutch could claim dominance over their indigenous counterparts and European competitors by enforcing obligation by consent.
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