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Empire by Law

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Aimee M. Genell reveals the importance of the Ottoman Empire’s autonomous provinces, both within the empire and in the history of international relations.
  • 11 August 2026
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The Ottoman Empire long used flexible administrative arrangements to govern its vast domains. Starting in the 1830s, however, European intervention in Ottoman affairs resulted in the emergence of a new type of negotiated province. The “privileged provinces,” which included Egypt and Mount Lebanon, enjoyed levels of administrative autonomy that were unparalleled not only within the Ottoman domains but also in late nineteenth-century imperial systems more broadly.

Empire by Law reveals the importance of the Ottoman Empire’s autonomous provinces, both within the empire and in the history of international relations. Aimee M. Genell argues that these provinces became the key arena in which possibilities for sovereignty and imperial control were negotiated and tested in the Middle East. She traces how the Ottoman state turned to international law to maintain control over parts of the empire that European powers attempted to wrest from it. Genell demonstrates that the concept of autonomy provided an important alternative model for imperial organization among the empire’s diverse subjects, even as successive Ottoman governments tried to curtail it. She argues that the Ottoman model of autonomy became the foundation for the mandate system established in the Middle East after World War I, with lasting and catastrophic consequences for the region. Bridging legal, international, and imperial history, this book shows how Ottoman practices of governance shaped the Middle Eastern political order.

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Price: $160.00
Pages: 432
Publisher: Columbia University Press
Imprint: Columbia University Press
Series: Columbia Studies in International and Global History
Publication Date: 11 August 2026
Trim Size: 9.00 X 6.00 in
ISBN: 9780231203340
Format: Hardcover
BISACs: HISTORY / Middle East / Turkey & Ottoman Empire, HISTORY / Modern / 20th Century / General, LAW / Legal History, POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General
REVIEWS Icon
With great clarity and analytical verve, Genell locates the roots of the mandate system in autonomous Ottoman provinces. This highly original perspective produces a slew of new insights about the region and its place in the emerging international order, from overlooked variations in sovereignty to dispersed forms of Ottoman engagement in international law.
— Lauren Benton, author of They Called It Peace: Worlds of Imperial Violence

Empire by Law is a bold reimagining of modern Middle Eastern history, as viewed through the eyes of a long-neglected class of political actors: lawyers. Genell unearths an Ottoman archive on autonomous provinces to demonstrate how Turkish lawyers engaged with their British counterparts in a battle to save the empire.
— Elizabeth F. Thompson, author of How the West Stole Democracy from the Arabs: The Syrian Congress of 1920 and the Destruction of Its Historic Liberal-Islamic Alliance

Masterfully written, Empire by Law offers a radical rethinking of the role of Ottoman law in the making of the modern Middle East. It will be a must-read for any student of Ottoman legal and political history and the global history of imperial rule in the nineteenth and twentieth centuries.
— Mostafa Minawi, author of Losing Istanbul: Arab-Ottoman Imperialists and the End of Empire
Aimee M. Genell is an assistant professor of international history at the Frederick S. Pardee School of Global Studies at Boston University.

Acknowledgments
Maps
Introduction
Part I. Competing Visions of Autonomy and International Law
1. The Emergence of the Privileged Provinces
2. Taming Autonomy Through Law
Part II. Autonomy on the Ground
3. Ottoman Sovereignty in Egypt
4. Egypt on the Gulf
Part III. The Making of the Mandate System
5. Woodrow Wilson in the Ottoman Empire
6. Mandate Variations
Conclusion: The Problem of Sovereignty in the Middle East
Notes
Index