7 CH Global Insterstate System
7 CH Global Insterstate System
7 CH Global Insterstate System
- Interstate System
o The origins of the present-day concept of sovereignty can be traced back with the
Treaty of Westphalia, which was a set of agreements signed in 1648 to end the
“Thirty Years Wars” between the major continental powers of Europe.
o Westphalian system provided stability for the nations of Europe until it faced its
first major challenge by Napoleon Bonaparte – believed in spreading the principles
of the French Revolution – liberty, equality and fraternity.
o Anglo and Prussian armies finally defeated Napoleon in the Battle of Waterloo in
1815;
o To prevent another war, the new system created by the Royal Powers- “The
Concert of Europe,” an alliance of Great powers (United Kingdom, Austria, Russia,
and Prussia restoring the world of monarchical, hereditary, and religious privileges
of time before the French Revolution and the Napoleonic Wars).
o This system is called, the Metternich system named after the Austrian diplomat,
Klemens von Metternich;
o The Concert’s power and authority lasted form 1815 to 1914 at the dawn of World
War I.
- Internationalism
o A system heightened interaction between various sovereign states with the desire
for a greater cooperation and unity among states and people.
o Divided into broad principles: liberal internationalism and socialist
internationalism.
o The major thinker of Internationalism in the 18th century was Immanuel Kant –
believed that people living together require a government to prevent lawlessness,
without form of world government, international system will be chaotic.
o Kant imagined a form of global government.
o Another British philosopher Jeremy Bentham coined the word “international”
in 1780;
o Advocated the creation of “international law” that would govern the inter-state
relations;
o Believed that objective global legislators should aim to propose legislation that
would create “the greatest happiness of all nations taken together.”
o Another thinker (19th) that reconcile nationalism with liberal internationalism was an
Italian Patriot Giuseppe Mazzini; believed in a Republican government and
proposed a system of free nations that cooperated with each other to create an
international system.
o A free, independent states would be the basis of an equally free, cooperative
international system .
o Another internationalist in the 20th century was US President Woodrow Wilson –
saw nationalism as a prerequisite for internationalism; forwarded the principle of
“self-determination” that the world’s nation had a right to free, and sovereign
government.
o Became the strong advocate of the League of Nations at the end of WWI in 1919.
o He hoped that these free nations would become democracies able to build a free
system of international system of international relations based on international law
and cooperation; Wilson became the most notable advocate for the creation of the
league of nations.
- League of Nations
o Came into being that same year (1919);
o US was not able to join due to the strong opposition from the senate;
o unable to hinder another war for breaking out and helpless to prevent the onset of
WWII;
- Axis Powers
o Hitler of Germany
o Mussolini of Italy
o Hirohito of Japan
o Who were ultra-nationalists and had an instinctive disdain for internationalism and
preferred violently impose their dominance over nations.
- Allied Powers
o Composed of US, UK, France, Holland, and Belgium
- Karl Marx
o A German socialist philosopher who was one of the critics of Mazzini; an
internationalist who differ with the latter who did not believed in nationalism;
o He placed a premium on economic equality; did not divide the world into countries
but classes.
o Believed with Engels that in a socialist revolution seeking to overthrow the state
and alter the economy, the “proletariat had no nation.”
o After he died in 1883, his followers soon sought to make his vision concrete by
establishing their international organization, the Socialist International (SI)- a union
of European socialist and labor parties established in Paris in 1889; Achievement:
May 1 as Labor Day and International Women’s Day; and successful 8-hour
work day.
o SI collapsed during WWI
- Russian Revolution of 1917
o After the collapsed of Socialist International, a more radical version emerged.
o Czar Nicolas II was overthrown and replaced by a revolutionary government led by
the Bolshevik Party and its leader, Vlademir Lenin and the new state was called
Union Soviet Socialist Republics or USSR.
- Conclusion
o Examined the roots of the international system;
o Internationalism is but one window into the broader phenomenon of globalization;
o Increasingly international relations are also facilitated by international organizations
that promote global norms and policies. The most prominent example is the United
Nations.