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2 - The System: Mixed Claims Commissions in the Shadow of Empire

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  13 August 2021

Kathryn Greenman
Affiliation:
University of Technology, Sydney
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Summary

In the nineteenth- and early-twentieth centuries, mixed claims commissions were established as a way of resolving claims for injuries caused to foreign nationals by rebels when political instability, especially in the form of revolution and civil war, threatened foreign imperial and commercial ambitions and interrupted periods of capitalist expansion in decolonised Mexico and Venezuela. Enforcing state responsibility for such claims was often the justification for intervention in Latin America during the late nineteenth- and early twentieth-centuries. While not all of the mixed claims commissions were imposed by the threat or use of force, invasion, occupation and bombardment existed alongside arbitration as part of a spectrum of more or less coercive measures to protect foreign commerce and capital during this time. The system of mixed claims commissions – as a political intervention in decolonised Latin America – served to insulate global economic liberalisation against revolution and civil war in the decolonised world, by taking the question of who assumed the risk of harm by rebels out of the scope of national authority.

Type
Chapter
Information
State Responsibility and Rebels
The History and Legacy of Protecting Investment Against Revolution
, pp. 36 - 68
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2021

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