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English school of international relations theory

The English School of international relations theory (sometimes also referred to as liberal realism, the International Society school or the British institutionalists) maintains that there is a 'society of states' at the international level, despite the condition of anarchy (that is, the lack of a global ruler or world state). The English school stands for the conviction that ideas, rather than simply material capabilities, shape the conduct of international politics, and therefore deserve analysis and critique. In this sense it is similar to constructivism, though the English School has its roots more in world history, international law and political theory, and is more open to normative approaches than is generally the case with constructivism.

Overview edit

International system, international society, world society edit

English School scholars distinguish between international system and international society. The former is a quasi-physical realm, as proximate actors interact with one another.[1] The latter is an intersubjective realm where actors are bound together through rules, norms and institutions.[1]

International system edit

The classical English school starts with the realist assumption of an international system that forms as soon as two or more states have a sufficient amount of interaction. It underlines the English school tradition of realism and Machtpolitik (power politics) and puts international anarchy at the center of international relations theory.[2] Hedley Bull defined the international system as being formed "when two or more have sufficient contact between them, and has sufficient impact on one another's decisions to cause them to behave as part of a whole."

International society edit

Hedley Bull, however, argued that states share a certain common interest (usually the "fear of unrestricted violence")[3] that lead to the development of a certain set of "rules". He thus defined an international society as existent when:

…a group of states (or, more generally, a group of independent political communities) which not merely form a system, in the sense that the behaviour of each is a necessary factor in the calculations of the others, but also have established by dialogue and consent common rules and institutions for the conduct of their relations, and recognise their common interest in maintaining these arrangements.[4]

In Bull's view, any type of society needed to have rules about restraints on the use of force, about the sanctity of agreements, and about property rights.[5] Without elements of these three there would be no society.

These rules are expressed in a set of institutions that capture the normative structure of any international society. In the classical English School these were: war, the great powers, diplomacy, the balance of power, and international law, especially in the mutual recognition of sovereignty by states. To these could be added: territoriality, nationalism, the market, and human equality. Since these rules are not legally binding and there is no ordering institutions, speaking of norms would probably be more appropriate. States that respect these basic rules form an international society. Brown and Ainley therefore define the international society as a "norm-governed relationship whose members accept that they have at least limited responsibilities towards one another and the society as a whole".[6] States thus follow their interests, but not at all costs.[7] Another way of looking at this would be through Adam Watson's term 'raison de système', a counterpoint to 'raison d'état', and defined as 'the idea that it pays to make the system work'.[8]

There are differing accounts, within the school, concerning the evolution of those ideas, some (like Martin Wight) arguing their origins can be found in the remnants of medieval conceptions of societas Christiana, and others such as Hedley Bull, in the concerns of sovereign states to safeguard and promote basic goals, especially their survival. Most English School understandings of international society blend these two together, maintaining that the contemporary society of states is partly the product of a common civilization - the Christian world of medieval Europe, and before that, the Roman Empire - and partly that of a kind of Lockean contract.

English School scholars vary in terms of the claims they make about the "thickness" of the culture of the international society is, as well as the content of international society.[5]

World society edit

Based on a Kantian understanding of the world, the concept of world society takes the global population as a whole as basis for a global identity. However, Buzan also argued that the concept of World Society was the "Cinderella concept of English school theory", as it received almost no conceptual development.[2]

Reexamination of traditional approaches edit

A great deal of the English School of thought concerns itself with the examination of traditional international theory, casting it — as Martin Wight did in his 1950s-era lectures at the London School of Economics — into three divisions (called by Barry Buzan as the English School's triad, based on Wight's three traditions):

  1. Realist (or Hobbesian, after Thomas Hobbes) and thus the concept of international system
  2. Rationalist (or Grotian, after Hugo Grotius), representing the international society
  3. Revolutionist (or Kantian, after Immanuel Kant) representing world society.

In broad terms, the English School itself has supported the rationalist or Grotian tradition, seeking a middle way (or via media) between the 'power politics' of realism and the 'utopianism' of revolutionism.

Later Wight changed his triad into a four-part division by adding Mazzini.[9]

The English School is largely a constructivist theory, emphasizing the non-deterministic nature of anarchy in international affairs that also draws on functionalism and realism. It has been argued that, "the English School embodies the notion of a middle course between practical demands and moral claims. In contrast to the realist approach, the English School maintains that states are not entangled in a permanent struggle for power and that they limit their conflicts through common rules, institutions and moral imperatives. Unlike the revolutionist tradition, the English School accepts the realist premise that the state is the primary reality of the international political system and maintains that these imperatives foreswear the replacement of the society of states by a universal community of mankind." In this manner, the English School succeeds in incorporating the salient elements of the main traditions of International Relations theory.[10]

Internal divisions edit

The English School is often understood to be split into two main wings, named after two categories described by Hedley Bull:

  • The pluralists argue that the diversity of humankind - their differing political and religious views, ethnic and linguistic traditions, and so on - is best contained within a society that allows for the greatest possible independence for states, which can, in their forms of government, express those differing conceptions of the 'good life'. This position is expressed most forcefully by the Canadian academic Robert Jackson, especially in The Global Covenant (2001).
  • The solidarists, by contrast, argue that the society of states should do more to promote the causes of human rights and, perhaps, emancipation - as opposed to the rights of states to political independence and non-intervention in their internal affairs. This position may be located in the work on humanitarian intervention by, amongst others, Nicholas Wheeler, in Saving Strangers (2000).

There are, however, further divisions within the school. The most obvious is that between those scholars who argue the school's approach should be historical and normative (such as Robert Jackson or Tim Dunne) and those who think it can be methodologically 'pluralist', making use of 'positivist' approaches to the field (like Barry Buzan and Richard Little).[11]

Affinities to others edit

The English School does have affinities:

Contemporary English School writers draw from a variety of sources:

History edit

The 'English-ness' of the school is questionable - many of its most prominent members are not English - and its intellectual origins are disputed. One view (that of Hidemi Suganami) is that its roots lie in the work of pioneering inter-war scholars like the South African Charles Manning, the founding professor of the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics. Others (especially Tim Dunne and Brunello Vigezzi) have located them in the work of the British committee on the theory of international politics, a group created in 1959 under the chairmanship of the Cambridge historian Herbert Butterfield, with financial aid from the Rockefeller Foundation. Both positions acknowledge the central role played by the theorists Martin Wight, Hedley Bull (an Australian teaching at the London School of Economics) and R J Vincent.

The name 'English School' was first coined by Roy Jones in an article published in the Review of International Studies in 1981, entitled "The English school - a case for closure". Some other descriptions - notably that of 'British institutionalists' (Hidemi Suganami) - have been suggested, but are not generally used. Throughout the development of the theory, the name became widely accepted, not least because it was developed almost exclusively at the London School of Economics, Cambridge and Oxford University.

Criticisms edit

According to George Washington University political scientist Martha Finnemore, who notes that she is an admirer of the English School, the English School has not been received positively in American IR scholarship because there is a lack of clarity in the methods used in English School scholarship (for example, a lack of discussion about research design), as well as a lack of clarity in the theoretical claims made by the English School. She notes that the English School is reluctant to clarify its causal claims, which she contrasts with Constructivist research in the American IR tradition where there is an emphasis on constitutive causality – "how things are constituted makes possible other things (and in that sense causes them)".[12] She also notes that the English School does not engage in hypothesis testing, and that their works mirror the detailed narratives of historians rather than typical works in the social sciences.[13]

In a 1992 review of Martin Wight's work, Keohane criticized it, saying "Wight's greatest oversight... is his neglect of the scientific or behavioral search for laws of action (or contingent generalizations) about world politics."[14]

Key works edit

  • Herbert Butterfield, Martin Wight (eds), Diplomatic Investigations (1966)
  • Hedley Bull, The Anarchical Society (1977/1995)
  • Martin Wight, Systems of States (1977)
  • Martin Wight, Power Politics (1978)
  • Bull, Hedley; Watson, Adam, eds. (1984). The Expansion of International Society. Clarendon Press. ISBN 978-0-19-821942-2.
  • James Mayall, Nationalism and International Society (1990) [15]
  • Martin Wight, International Theory (1991)
  • Adam Watson, (1992) The Evolution of International Society, London: Routledge.
  • Tim Dunne, Inventing International Society: A History of the English School (Basingstoke: Macmillan, 1998)
  • Robert Jackson, The Global Covenant: Human Conduct in a World of States (2000). Oxford: Oxford University Press.
  • Nicholas J. Wheeler, Saving Strangers (2000)
  • Barry Buzan, From International to World Society?: English School Theory and the Social Structure of Globalisation (2002)
  • Nicolas Lewkowicz, The German Question and the International Order, 1943-48 (2010)
  • Ian Clark, Legitimacy in International Society (2005)
  • Edward Keene, Beyond the Anarchical Society: Grotius, Colonialism and Order in World Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002)
  • Kalevi Holsti, Taming the Sovereigns: Institutional Change in International Politics (2004). Cambridge University Press.
  • Brunello Vigezzi, The British Committee on the Theory of International Politics (1954–1985): The Rediscovery of History (Milano: Edizioni Unicopli, 2005)
  • Martin Wight, Four Seminal Thinkers in International Theory : Machiavelli, Grotius, Kant, and Mazzini (2005)
  • Andrew Linklater and Hidemi Suganami, The English School of International Relations: A Contemporary Reassessment (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press: 2006)
  • Andrew Hurrell, On Global Order: Power, Values, and the Constitution of International Society (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007)
  • James Mayall, World Politics (2013) [16]
  • Barry Buzan, An Introduction to the English School of International Relations: The Societal Approach (2014). Cambridge, Polity.

See also edit

References edit

  1. ^ a b Reus-Smit, Christian (2011). "Struggles for Individual Rights and the Expansion of the International System". International Organization. 65 (2): 207–242. doi:10.1017/S0020818311000038. ISSN 1531-5088. S2CID 145668420.
  2. ^ a b Buzan, Barry (2004). From international to world society? English school theory and the social structure of globalisation. Cambridge: Cambridge University Press. ISBN 978-0-511-18590-8.
  3. ^ Bull, Hedley (1977). The Anarchical Society: A Study of Order in World Politics. London: Macmillan.
  4. ^ Bull & Watson 1984, p. 1
  5. ^ a b Finnemore, Martha (1996). National Interests in International Society. Cornell University Press. p. 18. JSTOR 10.7591/j.ctt1rv61rh.
  6. ^ Brown, Chris (2009). Understanding International Relations. Basingstoke: Palgrave. pp. 48–52. ISBN 978-0-230-21311-1.
  7. ^ Dunne, Tim (1995). "The Social Construction of International Society". European Journal of International Relations. 1 (3): 367–389. doi:10.1177/1354066195001003003. S2CID 143439963.
  8. ^ Adam Watson, The Evolution of International Society, 1992, p. 14.
  9. ^ Wight, Martin (2004). Wight, Gabriele; Porter, Brian (eds.). Four Seminal Thinkers in International Theory: Machiavelli, Grotius, Kant, and Mazzini. Oxford University Press.
  10. ^ Lewkowicz, Nicolas (2010). The German Question and the International Order, 1943–48. Basingstoke and New York: Palgrave Macmillan. p. 9. ISBN 978-1-349-32035-6.
  11. ^ Pruszynski, S. (2013) What are the core elements of the international society approach to international relations? University of Southampton.
  12. ^ Finnemore, Martha (2001). "Exporting the English School?". Review of International Studies. 27 (3): 509–513. doi:10.1017/S0260210501005095. ISSN 1469-9044. S2CID 145103099.
  13. ^ Finnemore, Martha (1996). "Norms, Culture, and World Politics: Insights from Sociology's Institutionalism". International Organization. 50 (2): 325–347. doi:10.1017/S0020818300028587. ISSN 0020-8183. JSTOR 2704081. S2CID 3645172.
  14. ^ Keohane, Robert O. (1992). "International Theory: The Three Traditions. By Martin Wight. New York: Holmes & Meier, 1992". American Political Science Review. 86 (4): 1112–1113. doi:10.2307/1964428. ISSN 1537-5943. JSTOR 1964428. S2CID 147736666.
  15. ^ Mayall, J. (1990). Nationalism and international society. Cambridge University Press. Chicago
  16. ^ Mayall, J. (2013). World politics: Progress and its limits. John Wiley & Sons. Chicago

External links edit

  • Bibliography of the English School compiled by Barry Buzan for the University of Leeds research project

english, school, international, relations, theory, english, school, international, relations, theory, sometimes, also, referred, liberal, realism, international, society, school, british, institutionalists, maintains, that, there, society, states, internationa. The English School of international relations theory sometimes also referred to as liberal realism the International Society school or the British institutionalists maintains that there is a society of states at the international level despite the condition of anarchy that is the lack of a global ruler or world state The English school stands for the conviction that ideas rather than simply material capabilities shape the conduct of international politics and therefore deserve analysis and critique In this sense it is similar to constructivism though the English School has its roots more in world history international law and political theory and is more open to normative approaches than is generally the case with constructivism Contents 1 Overview 1 1 International system international society world society 1 1 1 International system 1 1 2 International society 1 1 3 World society 1 2 Reexamination of traditional approaches 1 3 Internal divisions 1 4 Affinities to others 2 History 3 Criticisms 4 Key works 5 See also 6 References 7 External linksOverview editInternational system international society world society edit English School scholars distinguish between international system and international society The former is a quasi physical realm as proximate actors interact with one another 1 The latter is an intersubjective realm where actors are bound together through rules norms and institutions 1 International system edit The classical English school starts with the realist assumption of an international system that forms as soon as two or more states have a sufficient amount of interaction It underlines the English school tradition of realism and Machtpolitik power politics and puts international anarchy at the center of international relations theory 2 Hedley Bull defined the international system as being formed when two or more have sufficient contact between them and has sufficient impact on one another s decisions to cause them to behave as part of a whole International society edit Hedley Bull however argued that states share a certain common interest usually the fear of unrestricted violence 3 that lead to the development of a certain set of rules He thus defined an international society as existent when a group of states or more generally a group of independent political communities which not merely form a system in the sense that the behaviour of each is a necessary factor in the calculations of the others but also have established by dialogue and consent common rules and institutions for the conduct of their relations and recognise their common interest in maintaining these arrangements 4 In Bull s view any type of society needed to have rules about restraints on the use of force about the sanctity of agreements and about property rights 5 Without elements of these three there would be no society These rules are expressed in a set of institutions that capture the normative structure of any international society In the classical English School these were war the great powers diplomacy the balance of power and international law especially in the mutual recognition of sovereignty by states To these could be added territoriality nationalism the market and human equality Since these rules are not legally binding and there is no ordering institutions speaking of norms would probably be more appropriate States that respect these basic rules form an international society Brown and Ainley therefore define the international society as a norm governed relationship whose members accept that they have at least limited responsibilities towards one another and the society as a whole 6 States thus follow their interests but not at all costs 7 Another way of looking at this would be through Adam Watson s term raison de systeme a counterpoint to raison d etat and defined as the idea that it pays to make the system work 8 There are differing accounts within the school concerning the evolution of those ideas some like Martin Wight arguing their origins can be found in the remnants of medieval conceptions of societas Christiana and others such as Hedley Bull in the concerns of sovereign states to safeguard and promote basic goals especially their survival Most English School understandings of international society blend these two together maintaining that the contemporary society of states is partly the product of a common civilization the Christian world of medieval Europe and before that the Roman Empire and partly that of a kind of Lockean contract English School scholars vary in terms of the claims they make about the thickness of the culture of the international society is as well as the content of international society 5 World society edit Based on a Kantian understanding of the world the concept of world society takes the global population as a whole as basis for a global identity However Buzan also argued that the concept of World Society was the Cinderella concept of English school theory as it received almost no conceptual development 2 Reexamination of traditional approaches edit A great deal of the English School of thought concerns itself with the examination of traditional international theory casting it as Martin Wight did in his 1950s era lectures at the London School of Economics into three divisions called by Barry Buzan as the English School s triad based on Wight s three traditions Realist or Hobbesian after Thomas Hobbes and thus the concept of international system Rationalist or Grotian after Hugo Grotius representing the international society Revolutionist or Kantian after Immanuel Kant representing world society In broad terms the English School itself has supported the rationalist or Grotian tradition seeking a middle way or via media between the power politics of realism and the utopianism of revolutionism Later Wight changed his triad into a four part division by adding Mazzini 9 The English School is largely a constructivist theory emphasizing the non deterministic nature of anarchy in international affairs that also draws on functionalism and realism It has been argued that the English School embodies the notion of a middle course between practical demands and moral claims In contrast to the realist approach the English School maintains that states are not entangled in a permanent struggle for power and that they limit their conflicts through common rules institutions and moral imperatives Unlike the revolutionist tradition the English School accepts the realist premise that the state is the primary reality of the international political system and maintains that these imperatives foreswear the replacement of the society of states by a universal community of mankind In this manner the English School succeeds in incorporating the salient elements of the main traditions of International Relations theory 10 Internal divisions edit The English School is often understood to be split into two main wings named after two categories described by Hedley Bull The pluralists argue that the diversity of humankind their differing political and religious views ethnic and linguistic traditions and so on is best contained within a society that allows for the greatest possible independence for states which can in their forms of government express those differing conceptions of the good life This position is expressed most forcefully by the Canadian academic Robert Jackson especially in The Global Covenant 2001 The solidarists by contrast argue that the society of states should do more to promote the causes of human rights and perhaps emancipation as opposed to the rights of states to political independence and non intervention in their internal affairs This position may be located in the work on humanitarian intervention by amongst others Nicholas Wheeler in Saving Strangers 2000 There are however further divisions within the school The most obvious is that between those scholars who argue the school s approach should be historical and normative such as Robert Jackson or Tim Dunne and those who think it can be methodologically pluralist making use of positivist approaches to the field like Barry Buzan and Richard Little 11 Affinities to others edit The English School does have affinities The pluralists have drawn from the classical political realism of Hans Morgenthau George Kennan The pluralists have also been influence by the underpinnings of Reinhold Niebuhr s Christian realism The solidarists have drawn from realist writers such as Stanley HoffmannContemporary English School writers draw from a variety of sources from structural neorealism of Kenneth Waltz in the case of Barry Buzan from social constructivism of Alexander Wendt see Tim Dunne from critical theorists in that of Andrew Linklater and even from the post structuralism of Michel Foucault in the case of James Der Derian History editThe English ness of the school is questionable many of its most prominent members are not English and its intellectual origins are disputed One view that of Hidemi Suganami is that its roots lie in the work of pioneering inter war scholars like the South African Charles Manning the founding professor of the Department of International Relations at the London School of Economics Others especially Tim Dunne and Brunello Vigezzi have located them in the work of the British committee on the theory of international politics a group created in 1959 under the chairmanship of the Cambridge historian Herbert Butterfield with financial aid from the Rockefeller Foundation Both positions acknowledge the central role played by the theorists Martin Wight Hedley Bull an Australian teaching at the London School of Economics and R J Vincent The name English School was first coined by Roy Jones in an article published in the Review of International Studies in 1981 entitled The English school a case for closure Some other descriptions notably that of British institutionalists Hidemi Suganami have been suggested but are not generally used Throughout the development of the theory the name became widely accepted not least because it was developed almost exclusively at the London School of Economics Cambridge and Oxford University Criticisms editAccording to George Washington University political scientist Martha Finnemore who notes that she is an admirer of the English School the English School has not been received positively in American IR scholarship because there is a lack of clarity in the methods used in English School scholarship for example a lack of discussion about research design as well as a lack of clarity in the theoretical claims made by the English School She notes that the English School is reluctant to clarify its causal claims which she contrasts with Constructivist research in the American IR tradition where there is an emphasis on constitutive causality how things are constituted makes possible other things and in that sense causes them 12 She also notes that the English School does not engage in hypothesis testing and that their works mirror the detailed narratives of historians rather than typical works in the social sciences 13 In a 1992 review of Martin Wight s work Keohane criticized it saying Wight s greatest oversight is his neglect of the scientific or behavioral search for laws of action or contingent generalizations about world politics 14 Key works editHerbert Butterfield Martin Wight eds Diplomatic Investigations 1966 Hedley Bull The Anarchical Society 1977 1995 Martin Wight Systems of States 1977 Martin Wight Power Politics 1978 Bull Hedley Watson Adam eds 1984 The Expansion of International Society Clarendon Press ISBN 978 0 19 821942 2 James Mayall Nationalism and International Society 1990 15 Martin Wight International Theory 1991 Adam Watson 1992 The Evolution of International Society London Routledge Tim Dunne Inventing International Society A History of the English School Basingstoke Macmillan 1998 Robert Jackson The Global Covenant Human Conduct in a World of States 2000 Oxford Oxford University Press Nicholas J Wheeler Saving Strangers 2000 Barry Buzan From International to World Society English School Theory and the Social Structure of Globalisation 2002 Nicolas Lewkowicz The German Question and the International Order 1943 48 2010 Ian Clark Legitimacy in International Society 2005 Edward Keene Beyond the Anarchical Society Grotius Colonialism and Order in World Politics Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2002 Kalevi Holsti Taming the Sovereigns Institutional Change in International Politics 2004 Cambridge University Press Brunello Vigezzi The British Committee on the Theory of International Politics 1954 1985 The Rediscovery of History Milano Edizioni Unicopli 2005 Martin Wight Four Seminal Thinkers in International Theory Machiavelli Grotius Kant and Mazzini 2005 Andrew Linklater and Hidemi Suganami The English School of International Relations A Contemporary Reassessment Cambridge Cambridge University Press 2006 Andrew Hurrell On Global Order Power Values and the Constitution of International Society Oxford Oxford University Press 2007 James Mayall World Politics 2013 16 Barry Buzan An Introduction to the English School of International Relations The Societal Approach 2014 Cambridge Polity See also editInternational community Global village World community Global politicsReferences edit a b Reus Smit Christian 2011 Struggles for Individual Rights and the Expansion of the International System International Organization 65 2 207 242 doi 10 1017 S0020818311000038 ISSN 1531 5088 S2CID 145668420 a b Buzan Barry 2004 From international to world society English school theory and the social structure of globalisation Cambridge Cambridge University Press ISBN 978 0 511 18590 8 Bull Hedley 1977 The Anarchical Society A Study of Order in World Politics London Macmillan Bull amp Watson 1984 p 1 a b Finnemore Martha 1996 National Interests in International Society Cornell University Press p 18 JSTOR 10 7591 j ctt1rv61rh Brown Chris 2009 Understanding International Relations Basingstoke Palgrave pp 48 52 ISBN 978 0 230 21311 1 Dunne Tim 1995 The Social Construction of International Society European Journal of International Relations 1 3 367 389 doi 10 1177 1354066195001003003 S2CID 143439963 Adam Watson The Evolution of International Society 1992 p 14 Wight Martin 2004 Wight Gabriele Porter Brian eds Four Seminal Thinkers in International Theory Machiavelli Grotius Kant and Mazzini Oxford University Press Lewkowicz Nicolas 2010 The German Question and the International Order 1943 48 Basingstoke and New York Palgrave Macmillan p 9 ISBN 978 1 349 32035 6 Pruszynski S 2013 What are the core elements of the international society approach to international relations University of Southampton Finnemore Martha 2001 Exporting the English School Review of International Studies 27 3 509 513 doi 10 1017 S0260210501005095 ISSN 1469 9044 S2CID 145103099 Finnemore Martha 1996 Norms Culture and World Politics Insights from Sociology s Institutionalism International Organization 50 2 325 347 doi 10 1017 S0020818300028587 ISSN 0020 8183 JSTOR 2704081 S2CID 3645172 Keohane Robert O 1992 International Theory The Three Traditions By Martin Wight New York Holmes amp Meier 1992 American Political Science Review 86 4 1112 1113 doi 10 2307 1964428 ISSN 1537 5943 JSTOR 1964428 S2CID 147736666 Mayall J 1990 Nationalism and international society Cambridge University Press Chicago Mayall J 2013 World politics Progress and its limits John Wiley amp Sons ChicagoExternal links editBibliography of the English School compiled by Barry Buzan for the University of Leeds research project Retrieved from https en wikipedia org w index php title English school of international relations theory amp oldid 1211549589, wikipedia, wiki, book, books, library,

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