The Global Transformation: History, Modernity and the Making of International Relations Front Cover

The Global Transformation: History, Modernity and the Making of International Relations

Description

The ‘long nineteenth century’ (1776-1914) was a period of political, economic, military and cultural revolutions that re-forged both domestic and international societies. Neither existing international histories nor international relations texts sufficiently register the scale and impact of this ‘global transformation’, yet it is the consequences of these multiple revolutions that provide the material and ideational foundations of modern international relations. Global modernity reconstituted the mode of power that underpinned international order and opened a power gap between those who harnessed the revolutions of modernity and those who were denied access to them. This gap dominated international relations for two centuries and is only now being closed. By taking the global transformation as the starting point for international relations, this book repositions the roots of the discipline and establishes a new way of both understanding and teaching the relationship between world history and international relations.

Table of Contents

Part I: The Global Transformation and IR
Chapter 1 The Global Transformation
Chapter 2 IR and the Nineteenth Century

Part II: The Making of Modern International Relations
Chapter 3 Shrinking the Planet
Chapter 4 Ideologies of Progress
Chapter 5 The Transformation of Political Units
Chapter 6 Establishing a Core–Periphery International Order
Chapter 7 Eroding the Core–Periphery International Order
Chapter 8 The Transformation of Great Powers, Great Power Relations and War

Part III: Implications
Chapter 9 From ‘Centred Globalism’ to ‘Decentred Globalism’
Chapter 10 Rethinking International Relations

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