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Individual Rights and the Making of the International System

Individual Rights and the Making of the International System

Individual Rights and the Making of the International System

Christian Reus-Smit, University of Queensland
September 2013
Available
Paperback
9780521674485

    We live today in the first global system of sovereign states in history, encompassing all of the world's polities, peoples, religions and civilizations. Christian Reus-Smit presents a new account of how this system came to be, one in which struggles for individual rights play a central role. The international system expanded from its original European core in five great waves, each involving the fragmentation of one or more empires into a host of successor sovereign states. In the most important, associated with the Westphalian settlement, the independence of Latin America, and post-1945 decolonization, the mobilization of new ideas about individual rights challenged imperial legitimacy, and when empires failed to recognize these new rights, subject peoples sought sovereign independence. Combining theoretical innovation with detailed historical case studies, this book advances a new understanding of human rights and world politics, with individual rights deeply implicated in the making of the global sovereign order.

    • New explanation of the emergence of the global international system by a leading scholar, showing the centrality of individual rights in developing the system
    • Major contribution to scholarship on human rights, showing how human rights are part of a wider historical struggle over individual rights
    • Combines an original theoretical contribution with detailed historical case studies

    Reviews & endorsements

    "Chris Reus-Smit has written a ground-breaking book. By showing that, during the last five centuries, revolutionary ideas on individual rights were at the roots of the demand for sovereignty and de-legitimation of empires, and therefore, also of the expansion of international systems and the evolution of international order, Reus-Smit’s theoretical and empirical tour de force, more than most books in international relations, reveals the social nature of international systems and how international orders transform."
    Emanuel Adler, Professor of Political Science and Andrea and Charles Bronfman Chair of Israeli Studies, University of Toronto

    "An exciting story about the surprising political power of ideas concerning human rights in the critical junctures at which the international system has undergone its greatest expansions. I have long argued that human rights ought to matter - Reus-Smit has demonstrated that they repeatedly can, and do, matter fundamentally."
    Henry Shue, Centre for International Studies, University of Oxford

    "Reus-Smit has written a brilliant book - strikingly original in its argument, ambitious in scope, and meticulous in its research. It should change the way that international relations scholars think about the international system and the theories we use to explain change."
    Kathryn Sikkink, Regents Professor, University of Minnesota

    "Scholars have offered a variety of explanations for the rise and triumph of the nation-state. Reus-Smit argues that most accounts fail to explain why people wanted independent statehood in the first place. His answer is human rights."
    G. John Ikenberry, Foreign Affairs

    See more reviews

    Product details

    July 2013
    Adobe eBook Reader
    9781107287549
    0 pages
    0kg
    This ISBN is for an eBook version which is distributed on our behalf by a third party.

    Table of Contents

    • Introduction
    • 1. The expansion of the international system
    • 2. Struggles for individual rights
    • 3. The Westphalian settlement
    • 4. The independence of Spanish America
    • 5. Post-1945 decolonization
    • Conclusion.
      Author
    • Christian Reus-Smit , University of Queensland

      Christian Reus-Smit is a Fellow of the Academy of the Social Sciences in Australia and Professor of International Relations at the University of Queensland. Among his previous books, he is author of American Power and World Order (2004) and The Moral Purpose of the State (1999); co-author of Special Responsibilities: Global Problems and American Power (2012); and editor of The Politics of International Law (2004).