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A Historical Look at Contemporary International Relations

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A Historical Look at Contemporary International Relations Pre- Westphalian World The Westphalian System Nineteenth Century Europe The World Wars – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: A Historical Look at Contemporary International Relations


1
A Historical Look at Contemporary International
Relations
  • Pre- Westphalian World
  • The Westphalian System
  • Nineteenth Century Europe
  • The World Wars
  • The Cold War

2
Pre Westphalian World
  • Greek City States
  • Roman Empire
  • Middle Ages
  • Late Middle Ages

3
Greek City States (c. 400 B.C.)
4
Greek City States (c. 400 B.C.)
  • Organized independent states conducted peaceful
    relations with each other as they vied for power
  • Even as militaries clashed theses city states
    still conducted economic relations and trade
  • Precursor to the modern state system

5
Roman Empire (50 B.C. A.D. 400)
6
Roman Empire (50 B.C. A.D. 400)
  • Origin of imperialism developing the practice
    of expanding territorial reach
  • Maintain state security by expanding resources
    and boundaries, while at the same time ensuring
    domestic stability
  • Centralization of power
  • Empire is united through law and language, while
    allowing some local identity

7
Middle Ages (400-1000)
  • Centralization of RELIGIOUS authority in the
    church
  • Decentralization in political and economic life
  • Feudalism, which placed authority in private
    hands, was the response to prevailing disorder in
    the former Roman Empire
  • Power/authority was placed in different
    overlapping levels

8
Late Middle Ages (1000 1500)
  • Secular trends begin to undermine feudalism and
    the authority of the church
  • Increased trade promotes both economic and
    diplomatic relationships
  • Development of transnational networks spawn the
    age of exploration
  • MARKS THE TURNING POINT!

9
Treaty of Westphalia
  • Ended the Thirty Years War (1618-1648)
  • Embraced the notion of sovereignty
  • Monarchs had the ability to chose the version of
    Christianity for his/her people
  • Pope and HRE emperor stripped of power now
  • Sovereign states emerged with national armies
    which were secularly based
  • Established a core group of states that dominated
    the world until the beginning of the 19th century

10
Europe after the Peace of Westphalia
11
Dominant States
  • Austria Hungary
  • Russia
  • Prussia
  • England
  • France
  • Netherlands Belgium
  • (United Provinces)

Eastern powers revert to Feudal practices
Capitalism will spawn economic development in
the west.
12
Europe in the 1800s
13
19th Century Europe
  • Post American (1776) and French (1789)
    Revolutions
  • Concept of limited government introduced - the
    monarch derives his legitimacy from the people
    (Locke, Two Treatises on Government)
  • Rise of Nationalism this leads people to want
    to participate in the political process
  • Balance of Power brings relative peace to Europe

14
Late 19th Century Europe
  • Balance of power threatened when alliances begin
    to form and Russia invades Turkey (1877)
  • European imperialism in Africa and Asia helps to
    maintain the European Balance of Power
  • Balance of power breaks down due to
    solidification of alliances, resulting in WWI

15
World War I
  • Archduke Franz Ferdinand (heir to the Austro
    Hungarian Empire) was assassinated in Sarajevo
    (Bosnia)
  • Germany, an ally of Austria, encouraged them to
    attack Serbia thus beginning the war
  • Russia, England, and France enter the war on
    behalf of Serbia
  • Germany enters on the Austrian side
  • WWI officially ends the Balance of Power in Europe

16
Interwar Years
  • Three empires collapse
  • Russia
  • The Austro-Hungarian Empire
  • The Ottoman Empire
  • German dissatisfaction with the WWI settlement
    leads to fascism allies with Italy Japan
  • A weak League of Nations is unable to respond to
    Japanese, Italian, and German aggression, nor
    does it respond to widespread economic unrest.

17
Fascism
  • Fascism is an authoritarian political ideology
    (generally tied to a mass movement) that
    considers individual and other societal interests
    subordinate to the needs of the state, and seeks
    to forge a type of national unity, usually based
    on, but not limited to, ethnic, cultural, or
    racial attributes.

18
World War II
  • Axis Powers (Germany, Japan, Italy) crushed by
    the Allied Powers (England, US, France, and
    Soviet Union- an uneasy alliance)
  • Yalta Conference US, England, USSR planned for
    peace post war creation of United Nations
  • Redistribution of power after the war US vs.
    Soviet Union
  • Changing political boundaries
  • USSR absorbed the Baltic States, parts of
    Finland, Czechoslovakia, Poland, and Romania
  • Germany and Korea were divided
  • Japan was ousted from most of Asia

19
Yalta Conference 1945
Whats his problem?
20
COLD WAR
  • Begin to use the term Superpower referring to
    the US and USSR
  • Decline of European power
  • USSR creates buffer states by taking over in
    Eastern Europe Russia had been invaded from the
    west on many occasions
  • US begins to use the policy of containment
    Truman Doctrine
  • Ideological disagreements b/w US USSR

21
Cold War cont.
  • NATO vs. Warsaw Pact
  • Related crises occur throughout the world
  • Korean War
  • Cuban Missile Crisis
  • Vietnam War
  • Soviet invasion of Afghanistan
  • A long peace is sustained by mutual (nuclear)
    deterrence
  • The creation of the bipolar world in essence
    provided a new Balance of Power

22
End of the Cold War
  • 1985 - Gorbachev introduces ideas of glasnost
    (openness) and perestroika (restructuring)
  • 1989 Berlin Wall comes down symbolizing the end
    of communism in Europe
  • 1992 The Soviet Union disintegrates
  • The world is no longer bipolar US enjoys
    superpower status alone

23
Key Developments Post-Cold War
  • Changes are made in Soviet/Russian foreign policy
    by withdrawing from Afghanistan and Angola in the
    late 80s
  • 1991 Iraqi invasion of Kuwait the multilateral
    response unites the US and Russia
  • 1992 Yugoslavia breaks up, civil war ensues in
    Bosnia and Kosovo, NATO responds

24
Post-Cold War cont.
  • 1990s Widespread ethnic conflict arises in
    central and western Africa, Central Asia, and
    India
  • 2001 Al Qaeda attacks the United States US and
    coalition forces respond militarily in
    Afghanistan (02) and Iraq (03)

25
21st Century what events would you add?
26
NEW WORLD ORDER
  • With the end of the Cold War the US remained the
    only super power.
  • First time in the 20th century that one country
    alone wielded so much power.
  • Are there new super powers emerging and if so
    who? Why is the power of these states rising?
  • How are states aligning themselves in todays
    international political setting?
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