1st Edition

The Two Worlds of Nineteenth Century International Relations The Bifurcated Century

Edited By Daniel M Green Copyright 2019
    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    222 Pages
    by Routledge

    This edited volume presents a new, grand and global narrative for international relations (IR) history in the pivotal nineteenth century. Typically considered by IR scholars to be a long century of relative peace after 1815, the contributors offer a reconceptualization of IR in this century, arguing that it is temporally bifurcated, with very different patterns of behavior in the first and second halves.



    A mid-century discontinuity – a "pivot period" – marks the transition phase in Europe and globally when, in the space of a few years, a shift occurred from a comparatively calm, politically disconnected world under loose British free trade hegemony to one of scrambles for territory and keen interest in imperial possessions and conquest. All the book’s chapters deal with characterizing patterns of relations in the first half of the century or the second, with two addressing the discontinuity in the middle. In the first half aspects of regional orders are described (in Latin America, East Asia and Europe) alongside crucial developmental processes (missionaries and colonial expansion, the agency of regionally localized actors, of leading elites). In the second half, there is again discussion of regional developments (East Asia, Europe), but now under the onslaught and pressures of the latter half of the century, and spotlighting industrialization’s impact and the role of status competition and international law.



    In presenting this new narrative for the nineteenth century, it becomes clear that an era long considered uninteresting on Eurocentric grounds is in fact crucial and pivotal in global terms. This work will be of particular interest to students and scholars of the history of international relations.

    1. Introduction: The two worlds of nineteenth-century international relations

    Daniel M. Green

    2. Missionaries and the civilising mission in British Colonialism

    Andrea Paras

    3. Republican privateering: Local networks and political order in the western Atlantic

    Jeppe Mulich

    4. Limits of cooperation: The German Confederation and Austro-Prussian Rivalry after 1815

    Tobias Lemke

    5. Rejecting Westphalia: Maintaining the Sinocentric system, to the end

    David Banks

    6. Ordering Europe: The legalized hegemony of the Concert of Europe

    George Lawson

    7. Industrialization and competitive globalization after 1873: International thought and the problem of resources.

    Lucian M. Ashworth

    8. Between European Concert and global status: The evolution of the institution of great powers, 1860s to 1910s

    Thomas Müller

    9. Reordering East Asian international relations after 1860

    Seo-Hyun Park

    10. An evil of ancient date: Piracy and the two Pax Britannicas in nineteenth-century Southeast Asia

    Mark Shirk

    11. Conclusions: The value of our new historical narrative

    Daniel M. Green

    Biography

    Daniel Green is Associate Professor of Political Science at the University of Delaware. Trained as a comparativist and Africanist, he turned his focus to international relations theory and history in 2004 and was the Founding President of the Historical International Relations (HIST) Section of the International Studies Association in 2012. He is also the on-going organizer of HIST’s Nineteenth Century Working Group. He has published in several journals and edited volumes and is the editor of Constructivism and Comparative Politics (2002) and of Guide to the English School in International Studies (2014, with Cornelia Navari). He is currently completing a book project entitled Order Projects and Resistance in the Global Political System: A Framework for International History.