Chapter 2: Europe and the emergence of international society
31
The first, more traditional response argues that it
is impossible to conceive
of something called ‘the international’ without there being something
national against which to define it. Both terms are therefore intimately
connected to ideas of the
nation and the
state. According to this line of
historical
reasoning, we can only begin to think of the international – and
IR – after the rise of sovereign states in fifteenth- and sixteenth-century
Europe. According to this definition, the international can therefore be
understood as a description of the
state system,
first developed in
post-Reformation Europe, inhabited by autonomous political units, and
organised according to a collection of shared principles and practices such
as sovereignty and non-intervention. These principles and practices –
known as
institutions by members of the ES – bring some level of order
to IR in what is otherwise an anarchic system. This institutional order,
based on shared
principles and practices, is what Hedley Bull refers to as
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