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11 J. E. Asia & Int'l L. 375 (2018)
The Triple Intervention: A Forgotten Memory in the Discourse of the Nineteenth Century's International Law

handle is hein.journals/jeasil11 and id is 375 raw text is: 

The Triple Intervention 375


       The Triple Intervention:

       A Forgotten Memory

       in the Discourse of the

       Nineteenth Century's

       International Law



       Bijun   Xu*

       The  19th century's international law distinguished civilized from non-civilized States
       resulting in any country desiring equal treatment was required to obtain recognition
       from  those already deemed civilized. Japan was able to join the civilized world by
       presenting a civilized image of itself in the First Sino-Japanese War, which was depicted
       by  Western legal scholars as a clash between barbarism and civilization. Neither
       Japanese nor Western scholars of international law, however, have touched on the issue
       of the Triple Intervention. This incident serves as a case study for re-evaluating the
       operation of Western countries' international legal standards. The argument is, that
       these countries cloak their motives in legal language for self-aggrandizement, thereby
       demonstrating the ahistorical nature of the West's rhetoric of civilization. Further, this
       incident taught Japan the lesson that international law is concerned not with morality
       but with power.

       Keywords
       The  Triple Intervention, 19th century's  International Law,  Discourse  of
       Civilization, Japan,  First Sino-Japanese  War








Post-doctoral Researcher at Tsinghua University, China. LL.B. (Tsinghua), LL.M. (UMich), Ph.D. (HKU). ORCID:
https://orcid.org/0000-0002-0104-8749. This article is revised and updated version of Chapter VII of the author's doctoral
dissertation submitted to the graduate committee of the University of Hong Kong. This work was supported by China
Postdoctoral Science Foundation. The author may be contacted at: xubijun@mail.tsinghua.edu.cn /Address: School of
Public Policy and Management, Tsinghua University, Beijing 100084 P.R. China.
DOI: http://dx.doi.org/10.14330/jeail.2018.11.2.06


XI JEAIL 2 (2018)

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