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List of Tables
List of Abbreviations
List of Contributors
Part I: Introduction
1: Introduction
2: The Globalization of International Society
Part II: Global Context
3: International Systems
4: Patterns of Identification on the Cusp of Globalization
5: Economies and Economic Integration Across Eurasia in the Early Modern Period
6: Native Americans and the Making of International Society
Part III: Dynamics of Globalization
7: Imperial Rivalry and the First Global War
8: Empire and Fragmentation
9: Beyond 'War in the Strict Sense'
10: The Role of Civilization in the Globalization of International Society
11: Worlding China, 1500-1800
Part IV: Institutional Contours
12: Universal Sovereignty
13: Hierarchy, Hegemony, and the Norms of International Society
14: The Globalization of International Law
15: The Impact of Economic Structures on Institutions and States
16: Universal Human Rights
Part V: Contestation
17: Sovereignty as Responsibility
18: The 'Revolt Against the West' Revisited
19: Racial Inequality
20: Gender, Power, and International Society
21: Communication
Part VI: Conclusion
22: Conclusion
References
Index

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출판사 책소개

알라딘제공
This volume reconsiders the process of globalization, drawing on a wealth of new perspectives to understand better this momentous historical development.

The Globalization of International Society re-examines the development of today's society of sovereign states, drawing on a wealth of new scholarship to challenge the landmark account presented in Bull and Watson's classic work, The Expansion of International Society (OUP, 1984). For Bull and Watson, international society originated in Europe, and expanded as successive waves of new states were integrated into a rule-governed order. Internationalsociety, on their view, was thus a European cultural artefact - a claim that is at odds with recent scholarship in history, politics, and related fields of research. Bringing together leading scholars from Asia, Australia, Europe, and the United States, this book provides an alternative account: it draws out the diversity of polities that existed at around c1500; it shows how interacting identities, political orders, and economic forces were intensifying within and across regions; it details the tangled dynamics that helped to globalize the European conception of a pluralist international society, through patterns of warfare and between East and West. The Globalization of International Society examines the institutional contours of contemporary international society, with its unique blend of universal sovereignty and global law, and its forms of hierarchy that coexist with commitments to international human rights. The book explores the multiple forms of contestation that challenge international society today: contests over the limits of sovereignty in relation to cosmopolitan conceptions of responsibility, disputes over globalgovernance, concerns about persistent economic, racial, and gender-based patterns of disadvantage, and lastly the threat to the established order opened up by the disruptive power of digital communications.