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The Historical Context of Contemporary International Relations

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Weak League of Nations unable to respond to Japanese, Italian and German ... beginning of a 'New World Order,' or did it have little effect on the general ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: The Historical Context of Contemporary International Relations


1
Chapter 2
The Historical Context of Contemporary
International Relations

2
Key Developments Before 1648
  • Sovereign Greek city-states reach height of power
    in 400 B.C. carry out cooperative functions
    through diplomacy and classic power politics
  • Roman Empire (50 B.C.-400 A.D.) originates
    imperialism, develops practice of expanding
    territorial reach empire is united through law
    and language, while allowing some local identity
  • Middle Ages (400-1000) witness centralization of
    religious authority in Church, with
    decentralization in political and economic life
  • Late Middle Ages (1000-1500) foster development
    of transnational networks during age of
    exploration

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Emergence Of TheWestphalian System
  • Treaty of Westphalia (1648) ended Thirty Years
    War in Europe
  • Religious war fought mainly in Germany
    initially, conflict between Protestants and
    Catholics (in Holy Roman Empire) grew into
    larger conflict involving major European powers
  • Effects of Treaty
  • European states embraced notion of sovereignty
  • Monarchs have political authority, not Catholic
    Church
  • Sovereign enjoy rights within own territory

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Sovereignty Idea and Practice
  • French philosopher Jean Bodin
  • Sovereignty is the distinguishing mark of the
    sovereign in that he cannot in any way be subject
    to the commands of another, for it is he who
    makes law for the subject, abrogates law already
    made, and amends obsolete law
  • Limits to sovereignty divine or natural law,
    covenants, contracts

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Key Developments After Westphalia
  • Notion and practice of sovereignty develops
  • Centralized control of institutions under
    military control
  • Capitalist economic system emerges

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Europe in the 19th Century Key Principles
  • Legitimacy moral and legal right to rule, based
    on law, custom, heredity, or consent of governed
    rulers subject to limitations imposed by man
  • Nationalism people share devotion and allegiance
    to nation usually based on shared
    characteristics of people, common religion,
    language, historical experience, etc.

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Developments in 19th Century Europe
  • Concert(s) of Europe following Napoleon, great
    powers meet periodically (Britain, Austria,
    Russia, and Prussia) to reach agreement on
    problems threatening peace among European states
  • initially aimed at containing France, achieve
    balance of power maintain territorial
    arrangements made at Congress of Vienna
    (1814-1815) kept relative peace for about 40
    years
  • Congress of Berlin (1878) Berlin Conference
    (1884)
  • 19th Century European concert held together by
    core beliefs of superiority and fear of
    revolution from below
  • Relative international peace no wars among great
    powers

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Explaining 19th Century Peace
  • European solidarity Christian, civilized
  • Elites united by fear of revolution from below
  • Preoccupied by unification in Germany and Italy
  • Engaged in territorial expansion/colonialism
    outside of Europe competition exported
  • Balance of power
  • States with relatively equal power
  • Form alliances to counteract powerful states

15
Solidification Of Alliances The Breakdown
  • Russia invades Turkey in 1877
  • Conflict escalates in Latin America
  • Competition for territory at Congress of Berlin
  • Emerging Triple Alliance (Germany, Austria,
    Italy)
  • Emerging Dual Alliance (France, Russia)
  • World War I

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Key Developments in 19th Century Europe
  • From revolutions emerge two concepts absolutist
    rule subject to limitations and nationalism
  • System managed by balance of power brings
    relative peace to Europe
  • European imperialism in Asia and Africa helps to
    maintain European balance of power
  • Balance of power breaks down due to
    solidifications of alliances, resulting in World
    War I

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Key Developments in the Interwar Years
  • Three empires collapse Russia by revolution, the
    Austro-Hungarian Empire by dismemberment, and the
    Ottoman Empire by external wars and internal
    turmoil, leads to resurgence of nationalisms
  • German dissatisfaction with World War I
    settlement leads to fascism finds allies in
    Italy and Japan
  • Weak League of Nations unable to respond to
    Japanese, Italian and German aggression, and
    widespread economic unrest.

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In The Aftermath Of World War II
  • Emergence of two superpowers U.S. and Soviet
    Union
  • Decline of Europe
  • Cold War with differences in geopolitical
    national interests and in ideology (capitalism
    vs. socialism)
  • Gradual end of colonialism
  • Cold War played out through third-parties/clients/
    proxies
  • Development of NATO Warsaw Pact

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IMPORTANT EVENTS OF THE COLD WAR 1
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The Cold War as a Series of Major Crises
  • Berlin blockade (1949)
  • Korean War (1950-53)
  • Cuban missile crisis (1962)
  • Vietnam War
  • Proxy wars in Middle East, Africa, Asia,
    South/Central America

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Explaining the Cold War as a Long Peace
  • John Gaddis
  • Key role of nuclear deterrence (MAD)
  • Bipolarity led to system stability
  • U.S. economic hegemony, able to maintain
    stability
  • Economic liberalism
  • Long historical cycles

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Key Developments in the Post-Cold War Era
  • Changes are made in Soviet/Russian foreign
    policy, withdrawal from Afghanistan, Angola in
    late 1980s
  • Iraqi invasion of Kuwait in 1990 multilateral
    response unites former Cold War adversaries
  • Glasnost and perestroika continue in Russia

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Key Developments in the Post-Cold War Era (cont.)
  • Yugoslavia disintegrates into independent
    states civil war in Bosnia and Kosovo U.N. and
    NATO respond
  • Widespread ethnic conflict arises in Central
    and Western Africa, Central Asia, Indian
    subcontinent
  • Al Qaeda carries out attacks against U.S. and
    interests abroad U.S. and coalition forces
    respond militarily in Afghanistan
  • U.S. invades and occupies Iraq
  • Terrorist attacks in Saudi Arabia, Spain, and
    Great Britain

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Discussion Questions
  • 1. Explain the importance of the Treaty of
    Westphalia for international relations. What
    significant concepts and principles informed the
    treaty? What notable changes in international
    relations did the treaty signal or set in motion?
    Discuss how contemporary international relations
    might be different (or not) without the Treaty of
    Westphalia, and provide support for your answer.
  • 2. What are the most important reasons for the
    relative peace that characterized
    nineteenth-century Europe? Why do you consider
    these particular reasons to be most important? Do
    you think any of the principles of
    nineteenth-century European politics are
    applicable to contemporary international
    relations? Why or why not?

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Discussion questions, II
  • 3. What started the Cold War, and how was this
    war different from previous ones within the
    international system? Now that the Cold War is
    over, what do you think are some of its lasting
    effects on U.S.-Russian relations and/or
    international relations more broadly?
  • 4. John Lewis Gaddis and a number of other
    scholars have referred to the Cold War as the
    long peace. Do you agree or disagree with this
    characterization? Explain your answer and include
    in your response a discussion of some of the
    reasons for Gaddiss assertion.
  • 5. Did the end of the Cold War really mark the
    beginning of a New World Order, or did it have
    little effect on the general course of
    international relations? Present a response to
    this question that draws on your knowledge of
    history and uses specific events from recent
    years to support your position.
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