Mark Mazower鈥檚 stimulating work analyses how the world was governed (or at least how attempts were made to govern it) in the periods following three 鈥渟ettlements鈥. First came the Concert of Europe, in which the leading powers managed things fairly amicably from 1815 until the Crimean War of the 1850s, and then in an increasingly fragmented and crisis-ridden way up to the cataclysm of 1914; next the brief and inglorious 20-year life of the fragile League of Nations, which succumbed to crises and conflicts, some of them built into the post-1918 鈥渟ettlement鈥; and finally the long and varied experience of the United Nations, founded in 1945, which has survived for two-thirds of a century.
One of Mazower鈥檚 original contributions is to examine how the formal arrangements set up by the world鈥檚 leading governments - the Concert, the League and the UN - increasingly had to interact with the informal transnational bodies we now know as non-governmental organisations, or NGOs. He gives clear (although sometimes inevitably brief) accounts of such bodies, from Giuseppe Mazzini鈥檚 People鈥檚 International League of the 1840s and Karl Marx鈥檚 International Workingmen鈥檚 Association (the First Workers鈥 International) of the 1860s to today鈥檚 Amnesty International and Human Rights Watch. Mazower describes, with fascinating examples, how the 鈥渢op-down鈥 structures of successive state-led governance systems were increasingly paralleled by a 鈥渂ottom-up鈥 proliferation of transnational bodies representing not only ideologies, but also the economic, social and other needs of civil society. By 1900 there was an intense and organised pattern of specialist international conferences for scientists, and 鈥渘ot far behind were hoteliers, architects, bankers, actuaries鈥 (and, most influentially, lawyers).
Soon the 鈥渇unctional鈥 concerns of these and other groups led to formal intergovernmental agreements - to recognise the Greenwich Meridian for timekeeping or set up the International Postal Union - and during the League of Nations period the creation of a range of more structured specialist agencies aspiring to 鈥済overn鈥 (or at least to influence) specific areas of international reality. They included the International Labour Organisation and the forerunners of the UN鈥檚 Food and Agriculture Organisation and Unesco.
The book鈥檚 account of the varied experience of the UN - through the Cold War between East and West, the demands for a 鈥淣orth-South dialogue鈥 and a 鈥淣ew International Economic Order鈥, the challenges of globalisation and then financial turmoil - points to at least two major conclusions. First, the growing primacy of economic issues has shifted 鈥済overning鈥 power towards such agencies as the International Monetary Fund and the World Bank at the expense of the UN system as such. And second, on this issue as on others - for instance, in the opaque and inadequately studied area of the intricate relations between governments and NGOs - the outcome is usually determined by national capitals, especially Washington. As A.J.P. Taylor put it, 鈥渟tates will be states鈥.
糖心Vlog
This impressively wide-ranging and forcefully argued work is not without faults. There are, first, some factual slips: although the 1919 treaty with Germany was signed in Versailles, giving rise to references ever since to the 鈥淰ersailles settlement鈥, there was no such thing as a 鈥減eace conference at Versailles鈥 (it was in Paris); Leon Bourgeois, the French statesman and pioneer of the League of Nations, was no 鈥渟ocialist鈥; and Mazower鈥檚 brief but incisive survey of the European Union鈥檚 current problems misnames the Brussels institutions housing both Robert Cooper and Herman van Rompuy (respectively, in fact, the Council of Ministers and the European Council). Regarding methodology, Mazower declares, as a historian, his allergy to the 鈥渜uasi-scientific language鈥 of political scientists concerned with multilateralism and related concepts, but he would have strengthened his case by considering more seriously the functionalist school, as represented for instance by David Mitrany鈥檚 influential tract of 1943, A Working Peace System. It is also curious that he calls E.H. Carr a 鈥渏ournalist and historian鈥 and his 1939 work The Twenty Years鈥 Crisis: 1919-1939 a 鈥渟lim volume鈥. Mazower鈥檚 book suffers, finally, from a chronic and lamentable stylistic blemish, systematically omitting the definite article before descriptors preceding individuals鈥 names, thus presenting us with the jarring ugliness of 鈥渃ommentator Walter Lippmann鈥, 鈥渢heologian Reinhold Niebuhr鈥 and so on, ad nauseam.
Overall, however, Mazower鈥檚 book will be of interest to a wide readership, and should inspire specialists in international relations to fill the gaps in our understanding that his survey has identified.
糖心Vlog
Governing the World: The History of an Idea
By Mark Mazower. Allen Lane, 496pp, 拢25.00. ISBN 9780713996838. Published 4 October 2012
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