Historical Treaties of Southeast Asia

A research program in global diplomatic history

Historical Treaties of Southeast Asia is a collaborative research program in Global Diplomatic History financed by the Swedish Research Council and running from 2022 until the end of 2027.

A team of seven researchers based in Europe and Southeast Asia investigate the role of treaties and treaty-making in the imperial expansion and colonisation of Southeast Asia from the eighteenth to the early and twentieth century.

The researchers systematically analyse all bilateral treaties concluded between a European, American or Japanese imperial power and a Southeast Asian polity between the eighteenth and early twentieth century. In addition, a selected number of diplomatic treaty-making processes are studied in detail. In doing so, the project aims to bring about a new and more nuanced understanding modern imperialism of relevance not only to Southeast Asia but globally.

 

Online Seminar: “As Long As We Use Our Own Customs”: The Orchestration of Adat in South Sulawesi's Treaty-Making Tradition.

Category
Events
Dates
2024-09-20 13:15 - 15:00

Online zoom-seminar.

 

Loui Buana (Leiden University/KITLV) will be presenting on the topic “As Long As We Use Our Own Customs”: The Orchestration of Adat in South Sulawesi's Treaty-Making Tradition.

 

The use of treaties to establish formal alliances between states in South Sulawesi has long been recognized in historiography. Legal historians like V.E. Korn and G.J. Resink have elucidated the important role of treaties in this region and their contribution to the development of Indonesian and international law. Less well-known however is that the treaties often included important references to adat (customary law), which often reveal important differences in the interests of the parties involved. My talk analyses how the orchestration of adat in the treaty-making process functioned as a strategic shield to protect autonomy and as a legal means through which dominant powers attempted to exert influence upon their supposed subordinates. I also make a comparison with treaties constituted by South Sulawesi migrants with the sovereigns of the lands where they settled, especially in the Malay Peninsula and Kalimantan. This way, I unveil how both in- and outside of Sulawesi the treaties were used as important diplomatic tools to accommodate and uphold adat.

Muhammad Buana (Louie) [S.H., B.A., Adv. LL.M.] is a PhD candidate at the Institute for History, Leiden University (2022) and a Guest Researcher at Royal Netherlands Institute of Southeast Asian and Caribbean Studies (KITLV). He studied Colonial and Global History, participating in the Cosmopolis program at Leiden University (2015), and additionally completed an Advance Master in European and International Human Rights Law, also at Leiden University (2016). His research interest covers legal history, environmental law, maritime networks and the interplay between adat (Indonesian customary law), Islam and colonialism in the Southeast Asian archipelago and the wider Indian Ocean world.

His recent publications include:

(with Perdana, Aditya Bayu) "Islands, maps, and Lontara’; Bugis counter-mapping on a nineteenth-century map of Nusantara," Wacana, Journal of the Humanities of Indonesia: Vol. 24: No. 3 (2023).

 ‘Borrowing adat and bargaining Islam: The creation and Islamisation of customary law in Mandar’, in: M. Kooria, S. Ravensbergen (eds.), Islamic law in the Indian Ocean world: Texts, ideas and practices (Oxon & NY: Routledge, 2021).

He can be contacted via: This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it., This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it.  

 

To participate, please register in advance via:

This email address is being protected from spambots. You need JavaScript enabled to view it. 

 
 

All Dates

  • 2024-09-20 13:15 - 15:00

Treaty-making and imperial expansion in Southeast Asia; New special issue of Diplomatica

 Four new articles in the special issue of Diplomatica

Read more …

Conference Report: Voices of Resistance in and Against the Dutch Empire

11-13 September 2024
Utrecht University, The Netherlands

Read more …

18
Oct
Presenter: Prabhakar Singh (BML Munjal University) Pre-registration required.

23
Oct
Pre-registration required. The program consists of six different presentations and two Q&A sessions.

13
Nov
Johan Huizinga Gebouw (Doelensteeg 16, Leiden) Room 2.60 (second floor).
To be held at Leiden Institute for History.

14
Nov
Herta Mohr building (Witte Singel 27A Leiden) Room 0.10
To be held at Leiden University.

22
Nov
Presenter: Priyasha Saksena (University of Leeds) Pre-registration required.

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