This sounds like a fascinating book. Not in my budget for time or money but ... if anyone out there does read it, feel free to give me a precis. Thanks.
Sally Low, COLONIAL LAW MAKING: CAMBODIA UNDER THE FRENCH
"The court of King Norodom and the temples of Angkor Wat became orientalist icons in the French colonial imagination, perpetuating an image of the Protectorate (1863–1953) as special and worthy of preservation. This contributed to exceptionalism in the way the Kingdom was colonized, including through law. Drawing on previously unexamined archival material, Sally Low presents a comparative case study of French approaches to colonial law, jurisdiction, and protection. Although the voices of non-elite Cambodians are largely absent from the archives, their influence on colonial law is evident as they resisted efforts to regulate their lives and their land. Low argues that the result was a set of state legal institutions and an indigenous jurisdiction that blended Cambodian and French notions of patronage and royal power as the source and authority for law."
Colonial Law Making: Cambodia Under the French a book by Sally Frances Low (bookshop.org)
ADMINISTRATIVE NOTE: I'm going to try to restore this blog to four-times a week status from the present three. We will see how things go.
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