Owen McGee

A History of Ireland in International Relations


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relations was rooted in the geopolitics underpinning the Congress of Vienna (1815).15 Nevertheless, practitioners of international history in Britain have often deemed it more important to look as far back as early-modern reformations or even to medieval statecraft.16 There are, of course, other examples. Not all contemporary theorists on international relations who speculate on the economic rise of Asia are blind to the fact that the history of Japan or India, let alone China, did not begin with the bombing of Hiroshima or the creation of Pakistan.17 Likewise, human rights theorists with a legal background understand that such ideas did not begin with the United Nations. Rather, theories of natural law and natural rights can be traced back to classical antiquity, while some have even suggested that the birth of a quintessentially modern notion of human rights, with a particular emphasis on racial equality, began with Catholic missionaries in early-modern South America.18 Norman Davies’ students of history in the College of Europe’s headquarters in Bruges and Warsaw have been keen to argue that the existence of centuries of writings on the idea of a European civilisation indicates that the Anglo-American, or ‘cold war’, consensus regarding an inherent geopolitical and ideological balance of power within Europe was largely artificial.19 Clearly, as Zara Steiner has pointed out, there are many different vantage points and approaches that can be adopted in the writing of international history.20

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