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The English Schools Contribution to the study of International Relations |

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The English Schools Contribution to the study of International Relations


About these ads (hp://en.wordpress.com/about-these-ads/) By Richard Lile (University of Bristol)

The aim of this paper is to explore the parameters of the English schools approach to the study of international relations (IR). What emerges from this exploration is that the contribution that has been made by the English school is much more eclectic and comprehensive than is sometimes acknowledged. It has become part of conventional wisdom within IR that the English school sees itself providing a via media that runs between two more polarised positions. Members of the English school have labelled supporters of the via media in various dierent ways: as rationalists, Grotians, and proponents of an international society. And without doubt each of these terms is considered by the English school to identify a particular point of view that lies between two extremes. Rationalists can observe realists and revolutionists on either side of them; Grotians see themselves separating Hobbesians from Kantians; and proponents of international society consider themselves to be occupying the middle ground that keeps theorists who focus on the international system apart from theorists who are concerned with the creation of world society. But despite the pervasive image of the English school siing securely at the centre of the discipline, recent proponents have argued that the methodological and ontological orientation of the school will need to be further rened if it is to be rescued from a somewhat marginal position within the discipline.[1] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn1) In particular, proponents of the English school argue that its profound anti-positivism and its rejection of realism needs to be brought to the fore.[2] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn2) However, this assessment of the English school can be challenged. Although members of the English school have seen it as one of their central tasks to create the conceptual space needed to examine international society, it will be argued here that this is only one feature of a much broader and more plural agenda. Critics, moreover, are not predisposed to accept that the emphasis reputedly placed on the via media by members of the English school gives them the right to occupy the centre stage of the discipline. Viewed from a less sympathetic perspective, the English school can look like perdious Albion, the balancer, ever willing to shi ground in order to be on the winning side in any argument. Like the popular stereotype of its eponymous namesake, there might seem to be something rather two-faced, duplicitous, and lacking in integrity, about the English school.[3] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn3) Unsurprisingly, advocates oer a much more benign interpretation of the conceptual space that the English school has endeavoured to carve out for themselves. Acknowledging that the English school is Janus-faced, it is seen to be capable of looking in two dierent directions at the same time. This skill thereby allows the school to act as an interlocutor between opposing positions that otherwise lack the ability to communicate eectively with each other. So the English school, it is argued, sees itself playing a crucial role in the promotion of an essential conversation that ought to be taking place about the nature of
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international relations. From the perspective of their critics, however, members of the English school are in no position to act as eective interlocutors because they are seen to lack a coherent or consistent point of view. On the contrary, like the cuckoo, they are oen seen to nest within and then commandeer well defended sites that have been built by other theorists. Or like the magpie, they are seen to purloin ideas from other theorists and then exploit them for their own advantage. For example, although they seek to distinguish themselves from realists, there is no doubt that members of the English school frequently cloak themselves in ideas derived from realism. And by the same token, although they fail to identify themselves as cosmopolitans, it is equally apparent that they oen take advantage of cosmopolitan thought. Various explanations have been oered to account for the apparent lack of any consensus among the members of this putative school of thought. First, it has been suggested that key members of the English school, such as Bull and Wight, shied ground over the course of their careers, moving from an essentially realist perspective to one that had at least some things in common with the revolutionists. Second, it has been argued that because the members of the English school are so highly auned to how diplomats and statesmen view the world, the schools emphasis on realism during the early stages of the Cold War when the school was being established, is simply a reection of the fact that state ocials were, perhaps insurprisingly, pulled towards a more realist perspective at that historical juncture. Third, it has also been argued that members of the English school have never adhered to a common perspective and so any aempt to link them together within a single tradition of thought inevitably results in a set of inconsistent and incoherent ideas. Fourth, it is suggested that the school has gone through at least four phases and its orientation has shied to some extent in the process. In this paper I want to suggest that arguments of this kind, in conjunction with the aempt to tie the English school down to an anti-positivist and anti-realist orientation, inhibit the need to recognise that the founding fathers of the English school were drawn to a pluralistic methodology that aims to nd ways of linking apparently disparate bodies of knowledge and understanding. There has, for example, been a persistent but nevertheless erroneous tendency to treat Wights three traditions of international theory as competing perspectives on the world. It follows that these traditions can then be set against each other with the theorists from each tradition being viewed as making incommensurable claims. But this is certainly not how Wight regarded his three traditions of thought. On the contrary, he linked them to three interrelated political conditions which comprise the subject maer of what is called international relations.[4] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn4) As he saw it, advocates of the three traditions tended to focus on one of these conditions at the expense of the others. Realists are seen to focus on the political condition of anarchy because they consider it to be an enduring and unchanging feature of international relations. Rationalists are seen to focus on diplomacy and commerce because they consider that continuous and organized intercourse can ameliorate the eects of anarchy. Revolutionists are seen to focus on the way that the multiplicity of sovereign states forms a moral and cultural whole that can transcend the eects of anarchy.[5] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn5) It is an oversimplication to suggest, therefore, that the English school is synonymous with the study of international society. Certainly the English school has acknowledged the importance of rationalist ideas but this is not to the exclusion of realist and revolutionist ideas. From an English school perspective, a comprehensive understanding of international relations must embrace all three traditions. Focusing on rationalist ideas at the expense of the other two traditions of thought will necessarily result in an incomplete picture. By the same token, it will be argued that it is a mistake to assume that the schools members are resolutely opposed to a positivist methodology. A comprehensive assessment of the work presented by members of the English school makes it clear that they rely on interpretivist, positivist and critical assumptions.[6]

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(hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn6) But although members of the English school have been relatively explicit about their their pluralistic orientation, they have certainly not discussed it in any detail or examined all of the consequences of following such a route. By aempting to map out the implications of adopting a pluralistic approach to international relations, it becomes apparent that there are substantial lacunae in the extant work of the English school. I conclude, therefore, by arguing there that the contemporary research strategy of the English school should be to aim at lling the gaping gaps in the original research programme rather than aempting to promote a more tightly dened approach, albeit one that is very distinctive, to the study of international relations.

Methodological Pluralism: For and Against

Although the English school has become ever more closely associated with the idea of international society, its link with Wights three rs realists, rationalists and revolutionists also persists as a dening feature. But in order to justify the claim that it is the association with international society that renders the English school distinctive, there is an accompanying tendency to assume that the English school necessarily privileges the rationalists at the expense of the other two perspectives. At the same time there is also seen to be a link, perhaps even a necessary link, between the study of international society and an interpretivist methodology[7] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn7) which has only recently started to be spelled out.[8] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn8) The nature of the link will be examined in a later section; the aim here is to scrutinise more closely the criticisms that have been levelled at the three rs triptych drawn rst by Wight and then later embelleshed by Bull[9] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn9) and which putatively oers such radically dierent approaches to the study of international relations. Once these criticisisms are highlighted, however, it immediately becomes necessary to widen the discussion and explore the persistent tension within the discipline between the drive for methodological and ontological monism and the desire to embrace methodological and ontological pluralism. The most rigorous criticisms of the English schools triptych have been levelled by an emerging group of thinkers who intend to reintegrate IR and political theory. The fundamental weakness of the English school is seen to arise from the aempt to generate an independent discipline of international relations. In the process, an aempt has been made to see what theorists have said in the past about international relations; several dire consequences are seen by the critics to have followed from this procedure. First, they argue, the English school has come to the erroneous conclusion that political philosophers have had lile of signicance to say about international relations.[10] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn10) They have only been able to reach this conclusion, it is insisted, because they have detached what key philosophers have had to say about international relations from the original context. It is argued that philosophers such as Rousseau and Kant did not tack on to their political philosophy a few paragraphs about international relations that can be detached, readily and meaningfully, from their complex and profound ideas on political philosophy. The sections on international relations can only be properly understood when examined in the context of the overall conception of a philosophers political thought. By the same token, it is also argued that political theorists have all too oen made the reverse but equally egregious mistake of failing to embrace the international dimension of political thought.[11] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn11). A second failing aributed to the English school is that when scavenging through what has been wrien in the past about international relations, ostensibly in the name of theory, they have failed to dierentiate

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genuinely philosophical contributions from the merely polemical.[12] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn12) Given these two failings, it is seen to be unsurprising, although unquestionably incorrect, to reach such gloomy conclusions about the quality of IR theory. Alongside the aempts to reintegrate political and international relations theory, it has also been observed that IR has undergone a forty year bizarre detour[13] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn13) during which the discipline has systematically sought to separate facts from values, with the result that normative thinking about international relations has been consistently eschewed. The English school does not escape from this criticism because it is argued that its members have displayed a bias towards objective explanation as the result of giving epistemological priority to the facts.[14] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn14) On the face of it, this criticism would appear to be justied. Certainly Wight acknowledges that whereas political philosophers have devoted a good deal of their time endeavouring to theorise about the good life, there is lile scope for such theorising in the eld of international relations because international theory is, necessarily, the theory of survival.[15] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn15) This distinction, however, is increasingly seen to provide a perfect illustration of the fallacy of the false dichotomy. Boucher insists that this division between progressive political theory and non-progressive international theory is highly contentious, while Brown insists that the division results in an undertheorised and limited conception of international relations and he insists that international relations theory has to be contained within a more all-embracing project of social and political theory.[16] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn16) At this juncture, however, advocates of normative political theory start to part company from each other. Although they agree that it would be a mistake to follow the route mapped out by the English school because its tripych does no more that present divergent pictures of international relations, there is no agreement on how theorists should be characterised once the reintegration of political and international theory has been realised. Perhaps the most inuential contender is the division highlighted most eectively by Brown and Thompson between communitarians and cosmopolitants.[17] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn17) Communitarians take it for granted that the rights and duties of individuals are grounded in historically constructed communities, whereas the cosmopolitans posit the existence of a world community made up of individuals who, although represented through states, are subject to a common conception of morality. These two perspectives generate radically dierent assessments about how to approach a wide range of international problems from humanitarian intervention to the treatment of refugees. Boucher argues, however, that despite the popularity of the divide between communitarianism and cosmopolitanism, it does not overcome the diculty that he associates with the English school insistence on seeing its tripych of traditions as forming mutually exclusive and autonomous categories. Boucher goes on to suggest that there is an inadequate aempt to explain either how the categories are related to each other or how the theorists that are placed within each category are related to each other. As a consequence, the traditions are lile more than classicatory categories into which thinkers are forced irrespective of the embarrassing elements which appear to be ill at ease in their putative homes.[18] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn18) Boucher insists, however, that his solution to this problem is not to generate yet another classicatory scheme. Instead, he identies three styles of thinking that highlight particular sets of criteria that are invoked to guide, justify and recommend state action[19] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn19) These styles of thinking are seen to have generated three traditions of thought that are linked in a dialectical relationship. The tradition of empirical realism focuses on the way that human desires inevitably give rise to conicts of interest

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which need to be handled by rules of prudence and not moral imperatives. The second tradition allies justice with virtue and identies the existence of ethical principles that are universally applicable. The nal tradition, identied by Boucher as historical reason, is seen to provide a possible synthesis to the other two antithetical ways of thinking. This third mode of thinking recognises that morality is an historically emerging phenomenon and that what we observe today is a thick conception of particularistic morality that is embedded in the day to day practices of all societies operating alongside a very thin conception of universal morality that extends across a transnational global community of individuals. This historical mode of thinking, however, it can be argued, is itself a product of history. We now live in an era where, as Warnock puts it, we cannot but think historically and this has profound consequences for the way that we think about morality.[20] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn20) Boucher traces his third tradition back to Rousseau where this mode of historical reasoning is seen to outweigh Rousseaus well documented realist proclivities.[21] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn21) Boucher associates his approach with the idea of methodological pluralism which is premised on the assumption that these are not independent traditions of thought, but that they co-exist and that there is an inevitable tension amongst the competing ways of thinking about moral questions[22] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn22). Theorists, therefore, cannot take their positions for granted, but must constantly endeavour to defend their ideas against the arguments advanced by their competitors. Boucher, however, also insists that this is not an unchanging game with new theorists constantly chasing each other around the same old theoretical mulberry bushes. The ideas that are examined within the three traditions of thought are seen to undergo considerable changes, in contrast, according to Boucher, to the approach adopted by members of the English school whose traditions of thought are seen to identify three divergent sets of ideas that recur with very lile variation in dierent contexts, like coins that change hands, and whose value is lile aected by ination.[23] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn23) Somewhat inconsistently, however, reference is also made Wights curious propensity continuously to add subcategories to the traditions like species to a genus.[24] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn24) Moreover, although Boucher fails to recognise this fact, it can also be argued that members of the English school are also drawn to his conception of methodological pluralism. As noted above, Wight classies theorists reacting in one of three ways to anarchy. Wight may be less explicit than Boucher about his methodological pluralism, but without doubt he acknowledges that his three traditions co-exist in mutual tension and conict with each other.[25] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn25) Moreover, he also refuted the idea that the traditions formed railroad tracks running parallel to innity. Instead, he recognised that although theorists tend to concentrate on one of the three political conditions at the expense of the others, because the conditions are interrelated, there are inevitable cross-currents that pull the divergent streams of ideas together.[26] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn26) But perhaps even more signicantly, Linklater endeavours to demonstrate that the English schools triptych of realism, rationalism, and revolutionism exist in a dialectical relationship with each other, anticipating Bouchers argument, if not his categories.[27] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn27) But Linklater pushes the idea of methodological pluralism much further than Boucher because, as noted earlier, he links the triptych of realism, rationalism and revolutionism with three divergent methodologies: positivism, hermeneutics and critical theory. Moreover, he also places these methodologies in a dialectical relationship with each other, arguing that critical theory synthesises the antithesis that exists between positivism and hermeneutics. Although very neat and tidy, it is far from clear that this resolution is one that accords with the intentions of the founders of the English school. It fails to accommodate the ontological pluralism observed in the distinctions drawn between the anarchic international system, the rule-governed international society and and

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the transnational world society. These features of international relations are seen to co-exist and are not considered to exist in a dialectical relationship with each other. None of the elements are given ontological priority. It is assumed that they are operating within a single complex reality. The overarching methodological injunction which underlies this approach is that, as Bull puts it, the analyst must not reify any of these elements.[28] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn28) Although aention may be focused on only one of these elements, it must never be forgoen that this element is lodged in the context of the other two. It is insisted by Bull that it is always erroneous to interpret events as if international society were the sole or dominant element.[29] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn29) The point is reinforced by Watson, who argues that the distinctions are useful not because they have the eect of allowing the complex reality of international relations to be simplied into this category or that but because it allows that reality to be illuminated by considering it from a particular point of view.[30] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn30) But the signicance of this position has not always been recognised. Homann observes, for example, that it is impossible now to separate as rigorously as Bull did the transnational from the international elements of world politics.[31] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn31) In making this claim, Homann seems to be arguing that there has been an ontological shi in the world that makes it impossible to establish methodological divisions of labour. Homann is certainly not alone in adopting this position. Falk, for example, insists that neorealism oered a reductive, totalising focus on the power relations among sovereign states that could do no more than provide a geopolitical snapshot of the Cold War period. He goes on to argue that even this restricted image results in a misinterpretation of recent world history because it makes the present preoccupation with the dynamics of the world economy seem overly discontinuous with the past.[32] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn32) Like Homann, Falk is dismissing the idea that it is possible to adopt a pluralist position that legitimises an ontological division of labour. Falk could, of course, argue that in contrast to Bull, the neorealists do appear to assume that it is necessary to give ontological priority to their conception of the international political system. To the extent that this is true, then they are adopting a position of methodological and ontological monism.[33] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn33) But it is clear that Bull does not adopt this position, although he does lile to spell out the nature and implications of his methodological and ontological position.[34] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn34) An aempt will be made in the remainder of this paper to explore the methodological and ontological implications underlying the work of the English school. These implications have not been extensively explored because the English school has come to be so closely associated with the idea of international society. In focusing on this feature of the English school the methodological and ontological signicance of their tripych of images has been overlooked. The move being made here can, perhaps, be seen as a counterpart to the one made by Waever when he demonstrates that the conception of the international society formulated by the English school can be expanded through an engagement with the work of rational institutionalists, constructivists, and post-structuralists. The engagement reveals that it is possible and necessary to identify four separate layers to any international society.[35] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn35) Waever then articulates the possibilities and dangers of opening up the English school to a transatlantic dialogue in the interests of developing this richer and more complex conception of international society. Here, the aim is more modest and takes the form of a ground-clearing exercise. By exploring the methodological and ontological implications associated with each of the images in the English schools triptych the paper aempts to map out the parameters of the English schools contribution to the study of international relations.

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Positivism, realism and the international system

It may appear perverse, at rst sight, to suggest that the English school actively entertains the idea of positivism. Aer all, Bulls philippic against a scientic approach to the study of international relations is generally considered to epitomise the aitude of the English school to any approach tainted by positivism[36] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn36). But this aversion to positivism only holds true if the term is equated with natural science. From the perspective of the English school, there is no doubt that treating social systems as natural systems or overlooking the unique characteristics of human beings are errors of the highest order. But positivism does not have to be tied to a dehumanised or naturalised approach to social reality. Ashley, for example, associates positivism with any method that opens up the possibility of analysing the recurrent and repetitious paerns that occur in international relations.[37] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn37) Although the English school were undoubtedly opposed to any aempt to give the study of international relations a natural science twist, they were certainly not averse to looking for paerns in history. In one of Wights most widely cited quotations, he observes that international politics is the realm of recurrence and repetition; it is the eld in which political action is most regularly necessitous[38] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn38) There might appear to be a certain irony here for post-positivists[39] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn39) when it is noted how closely this quotation mirrors what Waltz, oen depicted as an arch positivist, has to say about international politics, because he similarly asserts that the texture of international politics remains highly constant, paerns recur and events repeat themselves endlessly[40] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn40). Advocates of the English school are prone to nd this textual link unseling. Dunne argues that the quotation and the essay as a whole needs to be seen in a broader context. When this is done, it becomes apparent that Buereld and Wight were both wanting to establish a normative theoretical agenda which took account of the tension between considerations of order and justice.[41] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn41) Epp insists that Wight only used the phrase recurrence and repetition once in his published work and that when the phrase is examined in the context of his total opus, it becomes clear that his main concern is with contingency and freedom. He insists, therefore, that there can be no possible link with the structural realism most closely associated with Waltz that has rendered history a null set and that projects a future inevitably like the present.[42] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn42) But these two analysts, however, are intent on directing the English school down the via media . In doing so, they fail to acknowledge that the founding members of the English school seem to have conceived of international relations in much more pluralistic terms than this preoccupation with the middle way permits. Focusing on the via media draws the boundaries of the English school much too narrowly. Because the members of the English school have all tended to be methodologically unselfconscious, there has never been any formal aempt to link their interest in historical paerns to their interest in the international system. Indeed, the role of the international system in their thinking has taken a number of dierent forms. From one perspective, it has been associated with an historical stage that arises before the emergence of an international society.[43] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn43) But from another perspective, it can be viewed as a counter-factual condition to explore what international relations would be like in the absence of an international society.[44] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn44)

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Both Bull and Watson, however, also conceptualised the international system as a dimension or layer, to use Waevers terminology, of a complex international reality. And Watson insists that the distinction between an international system and an international society is seminal for an understanding of international relations.[45] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn45) The international system is identied by the condition where states are in regular contact with each other and where in addition there is interaction between them, sucient to make the behaviour of each a necessary element in the calculation of the other.[46] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn46) Bull is well aware that realists have relied on this formulation to generate a conception of an automatic tendency for a balance of power to emerge in the international system, on the assumption that all states seek to maximise their relative power position.[47] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn47) But Bull is quite clear that there can be no inevitable tendency for a balance of power to arise because states do not alway seek to maximise their relative power position, oen preferring to devote their resources and energies to other ends.[48] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn48) As a consequence, he formulates the idea of a fortuitous balance of power that can emerge without any conscious eort on the part of any of the members of the system.[49] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn49) This outcome is seen to be most likely in a situation where two dominant states are both striving to achieve hegemony within an international system. Because the outcome is seen to be independent of the objectives being pursued by the states, it is viewed as a product of the system. As Watson puts it, systemic pressures act mechanically in the sense that they act outside of the will of the community concerned.[50] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn50) Despite Epps reservations, it has to be acknowledged that this conception of the international system bears an uncanny resemblance to the one formulated by Waltz, albeit developed in a much less systematic form. It is, therefore, less surprising than it might otherwise be to nd Bull identifying Waltzs Theory of International Politics as an important book that provides the rst, rigorously systematic account of international politics. [51] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn51) In place of Watsons mechanistic and Bulls fortuitous balance of power, Waltz identies the balance of power as an unintended outcome of a system made up of states which, in theory, will be striving to survive. He forties his theory by drawing a powerful metaphor between the balance of power as an unintended systemic outcome of states in an anarchic system striving to survive and the equilibrium price that forms in a market made up of states striving to maximise their prots.[52] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn52) The systemic approaches adopted by Waltz and the English school, therefore, are similar but certainly not identical. Waltz argues that the survival instinct of states has ensured that the balance of power has been an enduring feature of the international system and that it accounts for the continuous reproduction of the anarchic system as well as the familiar texture of international politics. For the English school, the mechanistic balance of power is an episodic and fortuitous feature of the international system. Dierentiating between the conceptions of the international system advanced by Waltz and the English school has important consequences. Bull insists, for example, that the abstract logic of the system advanced by Waltz leads to conclusions that are at loggerheads with common sense. For instance, it suggested, quite erroneously in Bulls view that the international system was still dominated by the superpowers and, equally absurd, that this outcome was in the best interests of us all.. Bull argued, however, not that Waltzs formulation should be discarded, but that it should be recognised that, on its own, it was quite inadequate.[53] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn53) From Bulls perspective, it is not possible to make sense of international

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relations without bringing international society and world society into play. When he embraces international society, however, the balance of power is identied as one of the crucial institutions that ensure that order is preserved. But to establish the balance of power as an international institution, he has move beyond his conception of a fortuitous balance. And, indeed, Bull does draw a clear distinction between a fortuitous and what he refers to as a contrived balance of power. The laer emerges when states are conscious of the need to counteract the actions of other states in order to maintain a balance.[54] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn54) But in drawing this distinction, it must be questioned whether or not Bull has over-specied how he denes the international system. As it stands, his denition presupposes that in addition to interacting, the behaviour of each state becomes a necessary element in the calculation of the other. But such a stiplulation would seem to generate a contrived balance of power whereas simple interaction can generate no more than a fortuitous or unintended balance. In wanting to identify the balance of power as an international institution, therefore, Bull problematises the distinction he draws between an international system and an international society in a way that Waltz manages to avoid. But despite generating this problem (which we will return to in the next section) the real strength of Bulls conception of the international system is that the balance of power is not seen to be a dening feature of the system. States, it is presupposed, oen fail to generate a balance of power and, as a consequence, Bull manages to escapeWaltzs presumption that the inevitable albeit unintended production of a balance of power simultaneously ensures that the anarchic structure of the international system is continuously reproduced. Escaping this presumption has proved to be important because when Watson came to examine international systems from a world historical perspective, he reached the uneqivocal conclusion that polarised international systems have never been the norm for most of world history.[55] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn55) Instead, challenging Waltzs bifurcation of political systems into anarchies and hierarchies, he insists that history reveals that there always is a pull towards hegemony in any anarchic system of independent states and a pull towards autonomy amongst the units that form any empire. From this persepective, then, mechanisms for reproducing anarchy and hierarchy have historically always been very underdeveloped, with the result that both anarchy and hierarchy have proved to be highly unstable structures. The notion that international systems can at best generate a fortuitous balance of power but more oen than not no balance at all is entirely consistent with this assessment. The conception of the international system developed by the English school is, therefore, much less robust than the model established by Waltz. In terms of Waltzs model, it is impossible to explain why an international system should transform into hierarchy. Of course, he does not deny that such a transformation is possible. But the logic of anarchy is seen to work against such a transformation. By contrast, the international system as conceived by the English school is exceptionally fragile and it lacks any feedback mechanisms that will help to secure its reproduction. [56] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn56) It follows that although at rst sight there would seem to be a powerful link between realism, the international system and positivism, in the English schools approach, the link between realism and the international system certainly proves to be surprisingly muted. For realists, as Waltz demonstrates, the balance of power is a dening feature of the international system. But Bull eectively separates these two concepts, and Watson goes onto demonstrate that there are very good empirical reasons for making this detachment. This assessment, therefore, drives a coach and horses through the assessment made by Wight and Waltz about the unchanging texture of international politics. An initial appraisal suggests that neorealists and the English school share a common conception of the international system. Closer investigation indicates that the English school subscribe to a very thin conception of the international system, one that presupposes no more than interaction. A very dierent

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methodological approach is required to reveal the texture of international politics, and when this methodology is adopted, it is the variation in texture that heaves into view.

Interpretism, Rationalism, and International Society

Operating as a spectator and looking for paerns in history is without doubt an important starting point for members of the English school. But such a methodological move only represents a place of departure and it can certainly not be identied as a point of destination. Even as historical observers, however, members of the English school have challenged the well-worn truism advanced by realists about the universality of the balance of power.[57] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn57) And in doing so, they have successfully, although perhaps unwiingly, provided the start of an explanation for the instability of anarchy.[58] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn58) But to go any further, it is necessary to move beyond a discussion of the international system and to engage with the idea of international society. According to Bulls formulation, an international society presupposes that states are conscious of certain common interests and common values and they also conceive of themselves to be bound by a common set of rules in their relations with one another, and share in the working of common institutions.[59] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn59) It follows that international systems and international societies take very dierent forms. Whereas international systems emerge whenever states start to interact and do not have to be aware that they are part of a system, members of an international society do have to be aware of their common or shared identity. International societies and international systems, therefore, rest on very dierent ontological assumptions and, as a consequence, they need to be examined by means of very dierent methodologies.[60] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn60) To identify an international system it is only necessary (at least in the thin version) to observe that interaction is taking place between states.[61] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn61) But an international society presupposes that there is an intersubjective agreement amongst statesmen and to get a grasp on this intersubjectivity requires a very distinctive methodology. Using the terminology developed by Hollis and Smith, positivists tell the story from the outside and this is an appropriate methodology for examining the way that states interact.[62] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn62) But to develop an understanding of the international societies that have formed across time and space it is necessary to be able to tell the story from the inside. And to be able to do this a methodology is required that enables the analyst to penetrate the thought world of other times and places.[63] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn63) Acknowledging the centrality of language in international relations is a necessary rst step to coming to terms with intersubjectivity.[64] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn64) Wight, in particular, was very sensitive to the importance of language. He points to the endless debates that take place in the international arena as statesmen try to reach agreement about the nature of the problems that they are confronting. But at the end of the day, any agreement achieved, necessarily involves language and oen the creation of new language. All these debates, Wight insists, are the stu of international theory, and it (the stu) is constantly bursting the bounds of the language in which we try to handle it.[65] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn65) As Epp notes, therefore, Wights inquiries invariably circle back to consider when and how the words that constitute the practice of international relations enter its vocabulary, are mediated historically in their meanings, and nd institutional expression.[66] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn66) For example, Wight observes a cultural

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chasm that separates medieval Christendom and the modern states-system which is marked by a gradual transition from a language of legal right to one of temporal power.[67] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn67) To understand this transition, it is inadequate simply to observe the changing nature of the practices, as the positivist does, there has to be a commitment to the exploration, in as ordered manner as the evidence permits, of the thought already embodied in practice.[68] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn68) And thought can only be accessed by language. Once the signicance of language is acknowledged, then the methods associated with hemeneutics and interpretivism come to the fore. These methods acknowledge that it is possible to draw on the language used in a given international society in order to identify and then understand the signicance of the interests, values, rules, and institutions that prevail in a particular place and at a particular point in time.[69] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn69) It is presupposed, moreover, that these features vary considerably from one international society to another but this can only be appreciated through an investigation of the language used by statesmen when they are engaged in the practices that dene a given international society. Understanding an international society, therefore, requires both historical and sociological depth.[70] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn70) Although there is a substantial literature that has explored the essential features of a methodology based on hermeneutics and interpretivism, members of the English school themselves have always very been methodologically unselfconscious and have viewed the task of geing an inside view as unproblematic.[71] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn71) Wight, in particular, has acknowledged that to gain a proper understanding of international society it is insucient to focus on the way that international society evolved in Europe over the last millennium. He recognises, in other words, that there is a need to adopt and develop a comparative approach. By comprehending the nature of previous international societies, we can develop a more profound understanding of our own. However, the English school does also assume that the international society that evolved in Europe managed to produce the most sophisticated set of international institutions to date. Sovereignty, the balance of power, diplomacy, and international law are all seen to be products of international society that came to fruition in the European international society. Aer examining the Greek city states, for example, Wight concludes Just as they had no diplomatic system and no public international law, so they had no sense of an equilibrium of power being the foundation and as it were the constitution of international society.[72] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn72) Although he is prepared to acknowledge that the language associated with the balance of power began to emerge in the subsequent Hellenistic age, it was still only a glimmering[73] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn73). This assessment of the balance of power is also endorsed by Buereld. He insists that the institution did not exist in the ancient world and that More than most of our basic political formulas, this one seems to come from the modern worlds reections on its own experience.[74] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn74) Like Wight, Buereld examines the language used in the past to discuss international relations in order to demonstrate that the thought and therefore the practice associated with the balance of power failed to emerge until the beginning of the sixteenth century. Buereld suggests that the rst evidence of a self-conscious awareness of the balance of power can be found in the writings of Guicciardini.[75] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn75) What distinguished Guicciardinis account of international relations was his image of the Italian city states jealously watching one anothers every move, diplomacy being unremiingly awake, and the whole still serving the purpose of peace.[76] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn76) Buereld is suggesting, in other words, that there is interaction between

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the city states sucient to make the behaviour of each a necessary element in the calculation of the other.[77] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn77) But Buereld also suggests that references to the balance of power over the next two hundred years still reveal a failure to appreciate the general nature of this international institution. There was something lacking in these analyses and this was an awareness of a general eld of forces.[78] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn78) From Buerelds perspective, therefore, it was only in the seventeenth century that the balance of power emerged as a fully edged institution in Europes international society. Wight is very conscious that there is something very distinctive about the importance aached to the role played by the language of international relations in the methodology that the English school is drawing upon. He acknowledges in particular that it may be seen to be at variance with conventional social science methods because the language of international relations is so indenite and embodying such tension between opposites.[79] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn79) But he believes nevertheless that it corresponds to the intractable anomalies and anfractuosities of international experience.[80] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn80) This assessment obviously appears to lie at the opposite extreme of his view that international relations are characterised by recurrence and repetition. Yet this opposition is no doubt one of the tensions that Wight is referring to. His assessment of the role played by language in the theory and practice of the balance of power perhaps helps to square the circle. Wight acknowledges that the balance of power is a metaphor which generates multiple meanings. But Wight insists that this feature of the metaphor should be regarded as an benet rather than a aw. He suggests that part of the fascination of the balance of power lies with the diculty of pinning down its meaning. We resort to balance of power terminolgy, he argues, because it is exible and elastic enough to cover all the complexities and contradictions encountered in the international system.[81] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn81) It helps to account for the inherent ambiguity that is such a crucial feature of international relations. Ironically, although Epp is particularly auned to the role of language in the English schools approach, he fails to appreciate that the ambiguity surrounding the language of the balance of power is a reection of the inherent ambiguity associated with the practice of the balance of power. [82] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn82) Hurrell is unquestionably right when he notes that even the quintessentially realist institution of the balance of power appears in a dierent light when viewed as the linguistic component of a central institution in international society. It is viewed less as a formal mechanism than as a metaphor that assists power political bargaining and legitimises agreed outcomes.[83] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn83) Bulls distinction between the fortuitous or mechanical balance of power and the contrived balance of power gets to the heart of the distinction that the English school draws between the international system and international society and the dierent methodologies required to uncover these features of international relations. But to provide a complete picture of international relations it is argued that world society must also be brought into play.

Critical Theory, Revolutionism, and World Society The idea of world society is without doubt the most problematic feature of the ontological and methodological framework devised by the English school. Bull argues that a world society is made up of individuals and it presupposes a world common good which identies the common ends or values of the universal society of mankind.[84] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn84) It follows, therefore, that a world society is not merely a degree of interaction linking all parts of the human community to one another. Bull insists that there must also be a sense of common interest and common values, on the basis of which comon rules and institutions
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may be built.[85] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn85) As Buzan has argued, therefore, there is then an assumption made by the English school that an international society needs to be underwrien by a world society.[86] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn86) The consequences of this position can be observed most clearly in the analysis developed by Watson when he suggests that in the aermath of World War 2, whereas it was possible to identify an international system, it was important to recognise that the two superpowers were not book ends holding together a single closely involved society of states; they were centres around which largely separate societies developed.[87] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn87) Bull also asks if the international politics of the present time should be viewed as an international system that is not an international society. He insists that the element of society is always present in international politics, although its survival is sometimes precarious.[88] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn88) His position on the idea of world society, however, turns out to be much more equiviocal. He insists, for example, that it has to be questioned whether a world society can at this juncture be regarded as anything more than an aspiration. Bull acknowledges that people oen write or speak today about international relations as if world society already existed. But he is quite clear that such a society has not yet emerged except as an idea or myth which may one day become powerful.[89] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn89) It is also widely accepted, however,as Wight notes, that If the community of mankind is not yet manifested, yet it is latent, half glimpsed and groping for its necessary fullment.[90] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com /wp-admin/#_edn90) But how best to achieve a world society is deeply disputed. On the one hand, Wight acknowledges the argument that international society conceals, obstructs, and oppresses the real society of individual men and women.[91] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn91) But, on the other hand, members of the English school believe that in so far as the interests of mankind are articulated and aggregated.this is through the mechanism of the society of sovereign states.[92] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn92) The image of a latent world society, however, does not square neatly with the discussion of transnationalism that Bull readily acknowledges as a feature of international relations, both past and present. He insists that one of the cardinal features of the contemporary world is that the contemporary international society is part of a much wider world political system that unequivocally embraces transnational forces.[93] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn93) But just as this development should not lead us to conclude that international society is likely to decline in signicance, nor should it encourage us to assume that world society is just round the corner. For Bull, the relationship between transnational forces and world society seems to take a similar but not identical form to the relationship between the international system and international society. Transnationalism provides evidence that there is, and perhaps always has been, interaction linking parts of the human community, in the same way that an international system can be identied by the interaction that takes place between states. Bull acknowledges, moreover, the importance of transnational society before 1914. And he goes on to make the claim that it is very likely that the role played by the residual medieval transnational relations that persisted in Europe during the sixteenth and seventeenth centuries were much more signicant than the transnational relations that persist in the contemporary world.[94] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn94) So it follows that changes in the level of transnational activity does not necessarily tell us very much about the fate of international society. It needs to be seen as a separate level of international relations, just as the international system represents a separate level from international society. But this still leaves open the question of the relationship between transnational systems and world society. The English school seem to work from the position that observable paerns of transnational behaviour must be distinguished from the existence of common values, interests and institutions that are associated with world society. But the distinction has not been articulated with any degree

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of clarity. Presupposing that the relationship between international systems and societies can be compared to the replationship between transnational systems and world societies, then it follows that whereas positivistic methods can be used to identify transnational systems, such methods need to be replaced by or at any rate supplemented with hermeneutic methods in order to study world society. Drawing on such methods, Bull is able to demonstrate that the existence of world society has tended to ebb and ow across time. He does so, for example, by examining the way that the inuence of natural law on international practice has tended to wax and wane over time. The doctrine of natural law, he argues, proclaimed the common rights and duties of men everywhere.[95] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn95) Natural law, therefore, presupposed that social bonds existed between Christians and non-Christians and this is reected, for example, in the universal laws of hospitality by which Spaniards and Indians were bound in the Americas as expounded by Victoria.[96] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn96). It was the belief in natural law, therefore, that helped to mitigate the exclusiveness of the idea of a Christian society.[97] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn97) It was also the universalist assumptions associated with natural law that inhibited the development of sovereignty as one of the dening features of European international society.[98] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn98) But by the eighteenth century Bull indicates that positive international law had taken the place of natural law in the theory and practice of European international society.[99] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn99) From then on it was taken for granted that to enter this society, it was necessary for states to subscribe to the values or standard of civilisation, that prevailed in Europe.[100] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn100) Two hundred years later, however, in the twentieth century, Bull observes a retreat from the earlier condence that the members of international societies were states and nations towards the ambiguity and imprecision on this point that characterised the era of Grotius.[101] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn101) By developing a conception of world society and linking it to international society, the English school have been able to draw a distinction between pluralist and solidarist conceptions of international society. In the former, the conception of world society is low, whereas in the laer it is well developed.[102] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn102) A debate has opened up within the English school about the respective merits and limits of pluralist and solidarist international societies. It follows that the English school has taken on a critical theory dimension because the debate reects a profound concern about the potential for human emancipation.[103] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn103) The English school, therefore, is not only concerned about analysing the history of international relations, it is also concerned about the moral implications of current and future developments in the international arena.

Conclusion

The main aim of this paper has been to demonstrate that the English school approach has been informed by methodological and ontological pluralism. As a result of adopting this approach, the English school has laid the foundations of a very broad ranging research agenda. The parameters of this agenda, however, have been no more than hinted at. For example, although the English school recognise the importance of adopting a sectoral approach to analysis, they focus almost exclusively on political and social sectors. Despite acknowledging the importance of economics, there has been a reluctance by the English school to embrace this sector wholeheartedly. Having said that, members of the English school frequently acknowledge the importance of trade as

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an international institution. It follows that the English schools underlying logic clearly demonstrates that to understand international relations it is necessary to identify and investigate all relevant international sectors. And although the methodological implications of this position have not been explored in depth a task that still needs to be undertaken it is assumed that it is useful and necessary research task to explore international relations sector by sector as well as looking at how these sectors interrelate. The English school have also made it very clear that progress in the study of international relations requires more comparative and historical analysis. There is a growing amount of research from this perspective that may not be directly inuenced by the English school, but nevertheless ts in with its broader research agenda.[104] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin /#_edn104) An obvious weakness with this approach has been the tendency by members of the English school to adopt a Eurocentric perspective. The assumption that European institutions and values are somehow superior to those of other international societies can and has been challenged. But it has been done so by following the route of comparative analysis.[105] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn105) What the English school have demonstrated, however, is that progress in the study of international relations requires a much longer historical perspective and a build up of comparative case studies. Following this route, it has become clear that the emphasis on anarchy and polarity in the contemporary discipline has come about at the expense of examining international relations from a world historical perspective.[106] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn106) The link between Toynbee and the English school helps to explain why the interest in world history approach is embedded in the English school approach.[107] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn107) The English school agenda also embraces a signicant critical and normative dimensionwhich has become increasingly signicant for younger scholars in the 1990s.[108] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn108) The current focus on humanitarian intervention, however, should not mask the longer and deeper concern about the relationship between the developed and developing world. Epp, for example, notes the importance of the process of decolonisation and the third world for the English school. [109] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn109) This concern about the future direction of international relations is informed and considerably enriched by the comparative and historical research of the English school because it displays a considerable interest in the normative frameworks embedded in part international systems. The current interest in the English school is in many ways remarkable because the work ofthe founders is relatively limited in scope. Nevertheless, Buereld, Bull, Wight, and Watson collectively provide a framework and research agenda which is much broader and more embracing than any of the competitive approaches. The breadth stems from the pluralistic nature of the approach. Not everyone is convinced of the desirability of pluralism. It is argued that the resulting analysis is oen indeterminate.[110] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn110) No doubt more thought needs to be given to the methodological and epistemological implications of such an approach. But given the fragmented nature of the contemporary discipline, it certainly seems worthwhile to give some support to an approach that aims to draw the disparate threads together.[111] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_edn111) (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref1)Notes

[1] See Tim Dunne Inventing International Society: A History of the English School London Macmillan, 1998, Ch 1, and Roger Epp, The English School on the Frontiers of International
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Society: A Hermeneutic Recollection Review of International Studies 1998, 24, 47-63 [2] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref2) Ibid. [3] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref3) This sentiment is nicely captured by Tim Dunne when discussing Ken Booths aitude to the idea of the international society as expressed in Human Wrongs and International Relations International Aairs 71, 1995, 103-26. Booth argues that it is the structure of international society that helps to sustain international wrongs. Dunne suggests that On this reading, the society of states is seldom to be loved rarely to be trusted. (Dunne, 1998, p189). Perhaps the most comprehensive aack on the English School comes from R.E.Jones The English School of International Relations: A Case for Closure Review of International Studies 7(1) 1981, pp.1-12. Note also R. B.J.Walkers perceptive comment in Inside/Outside: International Relations as Political Theory (Cambridge, Cambridge UP, 1993: p.32)that as with all appeals to a middle road, the intended compromise reinforces the legitimacy of the two poles as the limits of permied discourse. Note too how Wight observes that appeasement can be viewed as characteristic of the via media and, as such, the golden mean can be an overcautious and ignoble principle. In Martin Wight, Western Values in International Relations in Martin Wight and Herbert Buereld, eds., Diplomatic Investigations:Essays in the Theory of International Politics London, Allen and Unwin,1966, p.91. [4] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref4) M.Wight, International Theory: The Three Traditions London, Leicester UP1991:7 [5] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref5) ibid [6] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref6) An argument that can be found in the rst chapter of Andrew Linklaters Beyond Realism and Marxism London, Macmillan, 1990. [7] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref7) The distinction between explanation and interpretation or understanding is oen described as an epistemological one, see M. Hollis and S.Smith Explaining and Understanding International Relations Oxford, Oxford UP. (1990), for example. But I agree with H. Patomaki and C. Wight that this distinction is essentially a methodological one. See Aer Postpositivism: The Promises of Critical Realism International Studies Quarterly (2000).Their logic coincides with Kenneth Waltz in Theory of International Politics (Reading Mass. Addison Wesley, 1979) who insists that a distinctive methodology is needed to study the international system because it takes a dierent form to the systems studied by natural scientists. [8] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref8) See Lile(1986), Shapco(1994); Linklater(1990,1996); Epp(1998) [9] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref9) Wight(1991); Bull(1977[1995]) [10] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref10) See M.Wight Why is there no International Theory in H.Buereld and M.Wight Diplomatic Investigations:Essays in the Theory of International Politics London, Allen and Unwin,1966 [11] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref11) See Brown(1992); Williams(1992); Burchill(1996); Boucher(1998) [12] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref12) Boucher(1998:4) [13] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref13) Smith, 1992

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[14] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref14) Frost(1996) 12,18-19. [15] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref15) Wight,1966:33 [16] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref16) Boucher,1998:5; Brown 1992:83. [17] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref17) Brown(1992); Thompson(1992). The distinction is also reected in the division between man and citizen made by Linklater (1990) and between universalism and particularlism made by ONeill(1996) [18] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref18) Boucher, 1998:16. [19] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref19) ibid p.23 [20] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref20) Mary Warnock Consoled by Faith, Prodded by Reason THES, 5.11.1999, pp22-23. The argument is advanced in her discussion of Richard Holloway Godless Morality Canongate, 1999. She goes on to assert that as a consequence of this historical development it has become dangerous not to teach and discuss morality as something separate from religion. She argues that historical consciousness is even more important than our acceptance of a Darwinian view of nature, itself part of our imaginative grasp of history. [21] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref21) See Clark Reform and Resistance [22] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref22) Boucher, 1998: p 40. He formulates this approach in Texts in Context: Revisionist Methods for Studying the History of Ideas Dordrecht, Martinus Nho, 1985 [23] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref23) Boucher, 1998:17. [24] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref24) ibid [25] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref25) M.Wight An Anatomy of Political Thought Review of International Studies 13 (1987) 221-7. [26] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref26) Wight, 1991 p.266. Epp has stressed that Wight views international relations as a realm of persuasion involving a plurality of discourses that has the eect of dissolving the distinction between participant and observer. Roger Epp, Martin Wight: International Relations as realm of Persuasion in Francis Beer and Robert Hariman Post Realism: The Rhetorical Turn in International Relations East Lansing, Michigan State University Press, 1996. [27] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref27) Linklater, 1990, Chapter 1. [28] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref28) Bull, 1977, 22 [29] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref29) ibid p55. [30] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref30) Watson, 1987, 153. [31] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref31) Homann, 1995, xi [32] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref32) R.Falk The Critical Realist Tradition and the Demystication of interstate power: E.H.Carr, Hedley Bull and Robert W.Cox in Stephen Gill and James H.Mielman Innovation and Transformation in International Studies

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Cambridge, CUP, 1997 [33] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref33) Waltz accepts that the international political system does not exist in mutual isolation from, for example, international economic and legal systems. But he does insist that these constitute separate albeit related domains and that they possess their own properties and paerns of behaviour that are best understood by abstracting the specic system from the complex whole. Waltz(1979)pp. 8,46,79. [34] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref34) In fact, it could be argued that Waltz does Bulls job for him. Both acknowledge that it is possible to isolate the international system from other forms of system and as will be shown in the next section, they subscribe to remarkably similar conceptions of the international system. The only signicant dierences are that Bull fails to spell out the details of his methodological position and he goes on to isolate and examine two other features of international reality: international society and world society. [35] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref35) Ole Waever, Four Meanings of International Society: A Transatlantic Dialoge in B.A.Roberson,ed. International Society and the Development of International Relations Theory London, Pinter, 1998 [36] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref36) H.Bull International Theory: The Case for a Classical Approach in Klaus Knorr and James N. Rosenau eds., Contending Approaches to International Relations Princeton, NJ, Princeton UP, pp20-38 [37] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref37) R.K.Ashley, Political Realism and Human Interests International Studies Quarterly 25, 1981. 204-236. The problem with positivism as a term is that it is now oen used for denigratory rhetorical purposes. It is also highly contested. Jim George ties realism very tightly to positivism which he views as a spectator theory of knowledge. By this he means that knowledge of the real world is gleaned via a realm of external facts. Discourses of Global Politics: A Critical (Re)Introduction to International Relations Boulder, Colorado, Lynne Rienner Publishers, 1994, p.12. But as has been pointed out, this is almost the exact opposite of the approach adopted by Waltz. For a perceptive discussion, see Hans Mouritzen Kenneth Waltz: A Critical Rationalist Between International Politics and Foreign Policy. In Iver B. Neumann and Ole Waever The Future of International Relations: Masters in the Making London and New York, Routledge, 1997. [38] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref38) Wight(1966)p. 26 [39] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref39) See, for example, Jim George(1994) who insists that the members of the English school do no more than provide a variation on a positivist theme p35 and he insists that they are commied to its perpetuation p.12 [40] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref40) Waltz, 1979:66. He also observes the striking sameness of international life for millennia p66. [41] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref41) Dunne, 1998:96 [42] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref42) Epp (1996):124. [43] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref43) Bull [44] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref44) See Adam Watson Diplomacy: The Dialogue Between States London Eyre Methuen, 1982, p36

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[45] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref45) Adam Watson The Evolution of International Society: A Comparative Historical Analysis London Routledge, 1992, p.4. [46] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref46) Bull, 1977 p.10 [47] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref47) Ibid p.107 [48] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref48) Ibid. [49] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref49) Ibid.p.100. [50] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref50) Watson(1992) p.311. [51] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref51) Review of Theory of International Politics in Times Literary Supplement 18.12.1979. Cited in Andrew Hurrell Society and Anarchy in the 1990s in B.A.Roberson,ed. International Society and the Development of International Relations Theory London, Pinter, 1998, p.20 [52] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref52) For a discussion of the role of metaphors in Waltzs analysis, see Joness contribution in Barry Buzan, Charles Jones and Richard Lile The Logic of Anarchy: Neorealism to Structural Realism New York, Columbia UP, 1993. [53] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref53) Cited in Hurrell, 1998, p.20 [54] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref54) Bull, 1979, p100. [55] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref55) Watson, 1992 [56] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref56) There are further complications to understanding international systems introduced by the English school. For example, Wight draws a distinction between open and closed international systems. See Martin Wight, Systems of States ed H Bull, Leicester, Leicester UP, 1977p.75. Waltzs model presupposes that the international system is closed, whereas Wight argues that, historically, most international systems have been open. For further discussion see Richard LileNeorealism and the English School: A Methodological, Ontological and Theoretical Reassessment European Journal of International Relations 1, 1995, pp 9-34. [57] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref57) Note that it is mainly realists who have played on the idea of the universality of anarchy and the balance of power as its operating principle. Wallerstein, as the leading world systems theorist, starts from the assumption that prior to 1500AD, anarchy was always fragile and gave way to hierarchy. But note that Robert Gilpin, a neorealist, adheres to the same position. See War and Change in World Politics Cambridge, CUP, 1981. Note, also, that not everyone considers Gilpin to be a neorealist. See Stefano Guzzini Robert Gilpin: The Realist Quest for the Dynamics of Power in Iver B. Neumann and Ole Waever The Future of International Relations: Masters in the Making London and New York, Routledge, 1997. Finally, it is also worth noting that not all world systems theorists accept that history prior to 1500AD should be analysed within a framework of hierarchy. See [58] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref58) Bull makes lile use of his distinction between fortuitous and contrived balances of power and Watson also fails to use the distinction to account for the persistent tendency for anarchies to give way to hierarchies. [59] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref59) Bull, 1977, 13.

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[60] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref60) The advantage of viewing positivism as a methodology that requires only the observation of behaviour is that it then makes sense to suggest that as we move from examining the international system to examining international society a dierent methodology needs to be brought into play. Epistemologies operate on a higher level of analysis and are concerned with the nature of knowledge how we know that we know anything. Philosophers have devoted a good deal of time to this question. But it can be argued that neither natural nor social scientists need to worry too much about the issue. All they need to be condent about is that they are employing an appropriate methodology given the nature of the phenomenon under investigation. [61] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref61) Bulls denition presupposes a thicker conception of the international system, where the interaction between states is sucient to make the behaviour of each a necessary element in the calculation of the others. In principle, it can be argued that a positivist methodology is sucient to identify that the level of interaction has reached this point. But it can also be argued that, in practice, an interpretive methodology would be required to demonstrate that states were, in fact, taking each others actions into account. [62] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref62) Martin Hollis and Steve Smith Explaining and Understanding International Relations Oxford, Clarendon Press, 1990. [63] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref63) D.Bebbington Paerns in History Leicester, Intervariety Press, 1979, 92 [64] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref64) Epp,1998,55. [65] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref65) Wight, 1966, p.33 [66] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref66) Epp, 1998,55. It is, however, an exaggeration to suggest that Wights analyses invariably circle back to language. This is certainly one preoccupation. But he is also very concerned with changing paerns of behaviour and happily adopts a positivist orientation to accommodate this concern. [67] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref67) Ibid. Epp is discussing Wights discussion in Power Politics ed. by H.Bull and C.Holbraad, Leicester, Leicester UP, 1978, Ch.1. [68] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref68) M.Keens-Soper The Practice of a States-System in M.Donelan, ed., The Reason of States London, Allen and Unwin, 1978, p.40. [69] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref69) It is perhaps necesary to point out that Epp presupposes that language is spoken language. But archaeologists who rely on this method oen have to rely on artifacts to speak to them. [70] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref70) Martin Wight, Western Values in International Relations in Martin Wight and Herbert Buereld, eds., Diplomatic Investigations:Essays in the Theory of International Politics London, Allen and Unwin,1966, p.96. [71] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref71) A glance at some of the primary (egGodamer) and secondary (egBernstein) literature suggests that geing the inside story is not quite as straight forward as it might seem. [72] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref72) Wight, 1977, p66 [73] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref73) ibid p.67

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[74] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref74) Herbert Buereld the Balance of Power in Martin Wight and Herbert Buereld, eds., Diplomatic Investigations:Essays in the Theory of International Politics London, Allen and Unwin,1966, p.133 [75] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref75) Ibid. pp.136-7. Guicciardini developed the conception of a balance of power in Story of Italy that describes the tragic story of how the Italian city states failed to repulse the French invasion in 1492. [76] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref76) Ibid.p.137 [77] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref77) Bull, 1977 p.10. Taken from Bulls denition of the balance of power. [78] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref78) Buereld, 1966 pp. 137 and 138. [79] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref79) Martin Wight, Western Values in International Relations p.96 [80] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref80) . Martin Wight, Western Values in International Relations p.96. I take it that by anfractuosities he means that international relations are inherently convoluted or complex. [81] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref81) Wight, 1978, p.173 [82] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref82) Wight points to the equivocalness and placticity of the metaphor of balance The Balance of Power p.150. And Epp, 1998, p55 observes that although Wight is aware of the placticity of the metaphor he makes no aempt to resolve the confusion in the interest of distilling a scientically operational concept. But this is not because Wight is hostile to the formulation of such concepts when the circumstances are appropriate, but because he believes that such a copcept would be at odds with the practice. [83] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref83) Hurrell, Society and Anarchy pp.21 and 22. [84] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref84) Bull, 1977, p. 84. [85] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref85) Ibid. p.269. [86] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref86) Barry Buzan, From International Society to International System: Structural Realism and Regime Theory Meet the English School. International Organization, 47(3), 1993, 327-352 [87] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref87) Watson, 1992, p.289. [88] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref88) Bull, 1977, p.39 [89] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref89) Bull, 1977, pp. 81 and 82 [90] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref90) Wight Western Values in International Relations p.93 [91] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref91) Ibid. This is the argument developed by Booth. See Human Wrongs and International Relations International Aairs 71, 1995, 103-26.

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[92] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref92) Bull,1977, pp 82. [93] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref93) ibid p.266. [94] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref94) ibid 268-9 [95] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref95) ibid. p.32 [96] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref96) Ibid p.27 [97] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref97) Ibid p.32 [98] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref98) Ibid. p.29 [99] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref99) Ibid p. 31 [100] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref100) Ibid. p.32 [101] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref101) Ibid. p.37 [102] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref102) For aperceptive discussions of this dichotomy see Nicholas J. Wheeler Pluralist or Solidarist Conceptions of International Society: Bull and Vincent on Humanitarian Intervention Millennium, 21(3), 463-488; and Iver B.Neumann John Vincent and the English School of International Relations in Neumann and Waever. [103] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref103) See Linklater 1990 for a discussion of the implications of critical theory for the study of international relations. [104] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref104) Wight has done most to encourage this approach. [105] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref105) See, for example, Christian Reus-Smit, The Constitutional Structure of International Society and the Nature of Fundamental Institutions International Organization 51, 4, 1997, 555-89 and Rodney Bruce Hall, Moral Authority as a Power Resource International Organization 51,4, For an overview of some of this comparative analysis, see Lile,2000 [106] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref106) It is noticeable that Waltz (1979) is so preoccupied with the idea of polarity that he fails to take account of the idea of unipolarity and neo-realists only picked up on this dimension of international structure aer the end of the Cold War. An exception to this rule is Gilpin(1981) but there was no aempt to follow his lead during the Cold War. [107] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref107) See Thompsons , discussion of Toynbee. [108] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref108) See for example the work of Dunne and Wheeler. [109] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref109) Epp, 1998.See, however, the recently completed PhD by Rob Dixon at Aberystwyth who argues that the English school approach is still rather thin and needs to be underpinned by neo-marxist ideas. [110] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref110) See the criticism of Buzan,
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Jones and Lile(1993) in Stafano Guzzini Realism in International Relations and International Political Economy: the Continuing Story of a Death Foretold London, Routledge, 1998. [111] (hp://asrudiancenter.wordpress.com/wp-admin/#_ednref111) Concerns about the divided nature of the discipline goes back atleast to the mid 1980s. See Holsti The Divided Discipline. This entry was posted on 23/06/2008 at 10:58 am and is led under English School. You can follow any responses to this entry through the RSS 2.0 feed. You can leave a response, or trackback from your own site.

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