'The Cambridge History of International Law - Volume 2: International Law in Asia' - Ed by CWP alum Adele Carrai

May 10, 2026

Volume II of The Cambridge History of International Law breaks the mould of Eurocentric histories in the field by exploring international law in Asia from antiquity to decolonisation. Its twenty-six chapters span a vast geography, covering both the landmass and the oceans; offering accounts of statecraft and diplomacy, war and trade; marriage and gift-giving; treaty-making and dispute settlement; ideas of the human and 'the other'; and entanglements of political authority with mercantile, corporate and religious orders. The chapters introduce readers to a diverse cast of characters, from scholars, scientists, geographers, mapmakers; to traders, merchants, shipowners and entrepreneurs; and to women, revolutionaries, pirates, labourers, and monks. The volume explains leading historiographical trends, ponders the challenges of writing Asian histories of international law, highlights available materials and methods, and showcases the conceptual purchase of Asian histories for thinking about international law.

1. Lesaffer R. The Cambridge History of International Law. Carrai MA, Ranganathan S, eds. Cambridge University Press; 2026.


Maria Adele Carrai is an Associate Professor in the Department of Politics and International Relations and the Oxford School of Global and Area Studies (OSGA) at the University of Oxford, and a Fellow of St Cross College. She previously served as Assistant Professor of Global China Studies at NYU Shanghai and taught as an adjunct at NYU School of Law. She has been an Associate at the Harvard University Asia Center since 2021 and an Adjunct Associate Research Scholar at Columbia University’s Weatherhead East Asian Institute since 2019.

Her research examines the history of international law in East Asia and investigates how China’s rise as a global power shapes norms and reconfigures the international order, with particular interests in sovereignty, extraterritoriality, and digital governance. She is the author of Sovereignty in China: A Genealogy of a Concept since 1840 (Cambridge University Press, 2019) and the forthcoming China’s Normative Power in Cyberspace (Routledge, 2026). She co-edited The China Questions 2: Critical Insights into US–China Relations (Harvard University Press, 2022) and The Cambridge History of International Law in Asia (Cambridge University Press, 2026). Her work has appeared in leading journals in international law and international relations.

She received her PhD from the University of Hong Kong, was awarded a three-year Marie Skłodowska-Curie Fellowship at KU Leuven, and was a fellow at the Italian Academy at Columbia University, the Princeton–Harvard China and the World Program, the Max Weber Programme at the European University Institute, and a Global Houser Fellow at NYU School of Law.

Carrai is the founder and Executive Director of Mapping Global China, a research initiative that combines data and storytelling to build public-facing maps, datasets, and narrative outputs to better understand China’s global presence. The project has received support from the British Academy, the Carnegie Corporation of New York, the Ford Foundation, and New York University (including NYU Shanghai). She has also a track record as an institution-builder and convener, developing collaborative research infrastructures and multi-stakeholder events that connect academic research with policy and public debate.

A TED Fellow, she delivered a talk at TED Headquarters and frequently provides expert commentary to a variety of international media, including The Wall Street JournalThe New York Times, Bloomberg, Reuters, the BBC, The Atlantic, Vox, France 24, El País, and the South China Morning Post.


Photo Credit: https://www.cambridge.org/core/books/cambridge-history-of-international-law/9571A1C656421BC66A41BB64B46B4213?trk=feed_main-feed-card_feed-article-content#fndtn-information

Edited by Maria Adele Carrai, University of Oxford, Surabhi Ranganathan, University of Cambridge