"Winner of the Gustav Ranis International Book Prize, Macmillan Center, Yale University" "A New Yorker Best Book We've Read This Year" "Shortlisted for the Cundill History Prize, McGill University" "Finalist for the PROSE Award in World History, Association of American Publishers" "A radical and important book."---Christopher Kissane, Irish Times "A nimble and provocative history."---Michael Ledger-Lomas, Jacobin "Benton...uses harrowing case studies from around the world, and contextualizes events within the work of contemporary intellectuals." * New Yorker * "The book offers a strikingly original account not only of the significance of the proliferation of small wars across the globe; but of how what came to be called 'international law' was deployed by European powers . . . a remarkable achievement."---Anthony Pagden, Journal of Early Modern History "They Called It Peace . . . shouts a chilling reminder that humankind possesses a regrettably high tolerance for violence between war and peace. . . . A worthy read for historians, social scientists, scholars, politicians, and practitioners of war alike."---Lieutenant Colonel Terry Nail, USAF, Air & Space Power Journal "A thoughtful short history of imperial violence. . . . Recommended." * Choice Reviews * "The book spans centuries of history, delving into accounts of imperialist violence from Asia to South America, often focusing on lesser-known victims of imperialist violence."---Sophie Squire, Socialist Worker "Highly original."---David Lorimer, Paradigm Explorer "No one has been more articulate than Benton in showing how the regime of armed peace mapped clear pathways from lawful interventions with modest objectives to brutal campaigns of dispossession and extermination. . . a move from treating individuals as criminals to defining whole communities as natural enemies."---Ron Slate, On the Seawall "An encouraging turning point in the revision of the whole history of European imperialism . . . ground-breaking."---Leonardo Clausi, The Political Quarterly "A wonderful survey of the interplay of legal ideas and violence in European empires from the early modern era to the present."---William Smiley, Legal History JOTWELL "Thought-provoking. . . . By throwing light on the continuities between imperial and modern violence, Benton shows that the fiction of peace continues to license the reality of war. The book is an essential read for anyone interested in the history of international law, global empires and international relations."---Syed Hammaad Mehraj, LSE Review of Books "Lauren Benton offers a heuristic framework to understand imperial small wars, which she defines as both sustained colonial military campaigns and brief acts of violence motivated by plunder, reprisal, or punishment."---Jeremy Martens, Australian Book Review "Breathtakingly ambitious."---Boyd van Dijk, Law and History Review "This book is a triumph of historical legal scholarship. They Called It Peace will undoubtedly raise debates amongst international lawyers, jurists, and historians, and should be on the syllabus of anyone teaching international law."---Joseph Bienko, Journal of Imperial and Commonwealth History "A remarkable and daringly ambitious achievement."---Elizabeth Elbourne, International Journal of Maritime History "Indispensable for a deeper and more rigorous understanding of the role of violence in the making of empires.""---Graça Almeida Borges, Ler Historia