11 Introduction
to international relations
32
International society
Institutions of international society
Greek
Who? City-states, Oracles
How? Arbitration, Diplomacy (proxenia), Rules of War,
Sanctity of Treaties
Indian
Chinese
Roman
Christian
Islamic
European expansion
We should be more than a little critical of the
ways in which some writers
have traditionally thought about IR: largely through European eyes, and
mainly as something that only became seriously interesting when states
emerged as the main actor in world affairs. IR does not begin and end with
the rise of European states. Students of world
politics must nevertheless
confront an incontrovertible fact: that at some point between the late
fourteenth and the sixteenth centuries, Europe – initially around the
Mediterranean and later in states bordering the Atlantic (Portugal, Spain,
the UK, Holland and France) – began to evolve
in ways that changed the
course of European and world history. In a very important sense, there was
no such thing as a truly interconnected world before 1500. Only after the
period of European exploration and expansion beginning
at the turn of the
sixteenth century can we begin to conceive of such an entity emerging. As
one of the great historians of world history, J.M. Roberts, has argued, the
age of a true world history – and by implication the history of global IR
– starts in the fifteenth and sixteenth centuries
and continues for another
400 years, by which time European domination of the globe was complete.
The sources of this dynamic expansion have been hotly debated. Some
explanations are technical: from Europe’s medieval agricultural revolution,
to the advances made in learning during the Renaissance, to technological
improvements that made oceanic shipping safer
and their captains better
able to navigate. Some have suggested a more economic reason: the
rise of
capitalism. According to this thesis, it was no coincidence that
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