Law and Empire: Legal Systems from Hammurabi to Human Rights
MTA
A comparative legal history tracing how codes, courts, and legal thought underpinned governance and legitimacy in diverse societies
2nd Edition
*Law and Empire: Legal Systems from Hammurabi to Human Rights* offers a sweeping comparative history of how legal frameworks have shaped human civilization and the exercise of power. The narrative begins in the ancient Near East with the Code of Hammurabi, tracing the evolution of legal thought through the divine order of Egyptian *Ma’at*, the covenantal laws of the Hebrews, and the foundational democratic and republican experiments of Greece and Rome. By exploring diverse traditions—including the Legalist and Confucian synthesis in China, India’s *Dharma*-based systems, and the formation of Islamic Sharia—the book illustrates how law has historically served as both a tool for imperial control and a vocabulary for moral and social order.
Moving into the modern era, the text examines the "Papal Revolution" of Canon Law, the emergence of English Common Law, and the Enlightenment-driven Age of Codification that produced the Napoleonic Code. It delves into the dark history of legally sanctioned bondage and the transformative legal battles for emancipation and citizenship. The final chapters address the 20th century’s most critical legal shifts: the rise of authoritarian legal orders, the post-catastrophe architecture of universal human rights, and the challenges of decolonization.
This comprehensive study concludes by looking toward the future, analyzing how globalization, transnational governance, and disruptive technologies like AI and blockchain are currently redefining the boundaries of legal authority. Written for students, historians, and policy thinkers, this book provides a curated itinerary through the codes, courts, and jurists that have underpinned governance and legitimacy from antiquity to the digital age. It is an essential resource for anyone seeking to understand how law constrains, licenses, and recasts power across the globe.
This book is intended for legal historians, students of comparative law, and political science scholars seeking a deep understanding of how legal systems have legitimized and constrained power throughout history. It is also an essential resource for policy thinkers and human rights advocates who wish to contextualize modern transnational governance within a global historical framework. Readers interested in the intersection of philosophy, religion, and state-building will find the cross-cultural analysis particularly illuminating.
January 1, 2026
41,592 words
2 hours 55 minutes
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