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Victorian Visions of Global Order: Empire and International Relations in Nineteenth-Century Political Thought: 86 (Ideas in Context, Series Number 86)

Victorian Visions of Global Order: Empire and International Relations in Nineteenth-Century Political Thought: 86 (Ideas in Context, Series Number 86)

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Cambridge University Press, 11/15/2007
EAN 9780521882927, ISBN10: 0521882923

Hardcover, 316 pages, 22.9 x 15.2 x 2.2 cm
Language: English

This wide-ranging and original 2007 study provides an insight into the climate of political thought during the lifespan of what was, at this time, the most powerful empire in history. A distinguished group of contributors explores the way in which thinkers in Britain theorised influential views about empire and international relations, exploring topics such as the evolution of international law; the ways in which the world was notionally divided into the 'civilised' and the 'barbarian'; the role of India in shaping visions of civil society; grandiose ideas about a global imperial state; the development of an array of radical critiques of empire; the varieties of liberal imperialism; and the rise and fall of free trade. Together, the chapters form an analysis of political thought in this context; both of the famous (Bentham, Mill, Marx, and Hobson) and of those who, whilst influential at the time, are all but forgotten today.

1. Introduction Duncan Bell
2. Free trade and global order
the rise and fall of a Victorian vision Anthony Howe
3. The foundations of Victorian international law Casper Sylvest
4. Boundaries of Victorian international law Jennifer Pitts
5. 'A legislating empire'
Victorian political theorists, codes of law, and empire Sandra Den Otter
6. The crisis of liberal imperialism Karuna Mantena
7. 'Great' versus 'small' nations
scale and national greatness in Victorian political thought Georgios Varouxakis
8. The Victorian idea of a global state Duncan Bell
9. Radicalism and the extra-European-world
the case of Marx Gareth Stedman Jones
10. Radicalism, Gladstone, and the liberal critique of Disraelian 'imperialism' Peter Cain
11. The 'left' and the critique of empire c. 1865–1900
three roots of humanitarian foreign policy Gregory Claeys
12. Consequentialist cosmopolitanism David Weinstein.

'... excellent ... the standard ... is very high.... Ultimately the richness and success of any collection of this kind can be measured by the quality of the actual contributions and by the number of areas that emerge for further research and analysis. On both measures this volume scores highly and should be widely read.' Andrew Hurrell, Perspectives on Politics