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Historical Context of Globalization International Trade I30047 Wu Bolin
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Page 1: Historical Context of Globalization International Trade I30047 Wu Bolin.

Historical Context of Globalization

International Trade

I30047 Wu Bolin

Page 2: Historical Context of Globalization International Trade I30047 Wu Bolin.

Questions 1

• What is the idea of international society?

----refers to the rules, institutions, and shared practice that different groups of political communities have developed in the course of their interaction.

Page 3: Historical Context of Globalization International Trade I30047 Wu Bolin.

Hedley Bull

• a society of states exists when a group of states, conscious of certain common interests and common values, forms a society in the sense that they conceive themselves to be bound by a common set of rules in their relations with one another, and share in the working of common in-stitutions.

Page 4: Historical Context of Globalization International Trade I30047 Wu Bolin.

Many perspectives on major transitions driven by various deep-seated economic, power-political, or cultural factors,

Human agency has always played the key role in determining the underlying rules, norms and insti-tutions that shape the relations among interna-tional actors at any given time.

Page 5: Historical Context of Globalization International Trade I30047 Wu Bolin.

Ancient worlds

Greece:Arbitration

India:

Religious norms

China:

Confucian theory

Page 6: Historical Context of Globalization International Trade I30047 Wu Bolin.

Christian and Islamic orders

Medieval Europe’s international society was a com-plex mixture of supranational, transnational, na-tional and subnational structures.

The Catholic Church played a key role in elaborating the normative basis of medieval international society.—canon law.

Islam developed its own understanding of interna-tional society– the umma

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The emergence of the mod-ern international society• Principles of sovereignty and non-interven-

tion State

sovereignty

Non-inter-vention

Diplomacy

The balance of power

International law

1.Peace of Westphalia(1648)

2.Treaty of Utrecht (1713)

Sovereign Equality

Equilibrium of power

Page 8: Historical Context of Globalization International Trade I30047 Wu Bolin.

Problems of global international society

Traditional social

identities

‘virtual communi-ties’ emerge

The global finan-cial markets limit

The post-cold-

warorder

collapsed, failed, or fragmenting

statesAmerican military power

Greater than next ten most powerful states

combined

Earlier Eu-ropean in-ternational societies

Common culture and shared val-ues.

Environment and

poverty

Difficult to ac-commodate within a sovereignty-based interna-tional society

Page 9: Historical Context of Globalization International Trade I30047 Wu Bolin.

International history1900-1990

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Contents

Modern total war

End of empire

Cold war

Conclusion

3

2

4

1

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Introduction

Since 1990 world politics has been transformed in a variety of ways, three are examined in this chapter:

1. The transition from Europe crises to modern, industrialized total war;

2. The end of empire and the withdrawal of European coun-tries from their imperial acquisitions;

3. The cold war between the USA and the Soviet Union.

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Modern total war WWI WWII

Triggers and Causes:

Assassination of Archduke Francis Ferdinand of Austria in June 1914. Militarism, Imperialism, nationalism and alliance system

Political and economic instability in Germany. The harsh conditions of the Treaty of Versailles Rise of power of Adolf Hitler and his alliance with Italy and Japan to oppose the Soviet Union

Natural of War: War between countries for acquiring colonies or territory or resources.

War of ideologies, such as Fascism and Communism.

Method of warfare:

Fought from lines of trenches and supported by artillery and machine guns, infantry assault, early airplanes and poisonous gas. Mostly static in nature, mobility was minimal.

nuclear power and missiles were used, modern concepts of covert and special operations. Submarines and tanks were also more heavily used. Encryption codes for secret communication became more complex. Germany used the Blitzkrieg fighting method.

Casualties: Estimated to be 10 million dead, 21 million wounded, and 7.7 million missing or imprisoned. 1/20 of casualties were civilians.

More than 40 million men and women were serving in the armed forces by 1944, and civilian and military deaths exceeded 55 million. 2/3 of casualties were civilians.

Outcomes: The League of Nations was formed in the hope of preventing another such conflict.

The Soviet Union and the United States emerged as rival superpowers. The United Nations was established to foster international cooperation and prevent conflicts.

Genocide: The Ottoman Empire (Turkey) carried out genocide of Armenians.

German Nazis committed genocide against Jews and gypsies

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Thank You!