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ID131415
Title Proper1914 and 2014
Other Title Informationshould we be worried?
LanguageENG
AuthorMacmillan, Margaret
Publication2014.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The outbreak of the First World War remains a great historical puzzle and a source of concern, for if we do not understand how it came about we run the risk of stumbling into a similar catastrophe. This article draws parallels between the world of 1914 and the present. It starts with comfortable assumptions made by so many, then and now, that a major conflict was impossible or improbable and then looks at the paradox that globalization not only made the world more interdependent and linked, but also fostered intense local and national identities. It suggests factors that propelled Europe to war in 1914, including national rivalries, imperialism, the arms race and a shifting power balance between rising and declining powers, as well as ideologies and assumptions such as Social Darwinism and militarism, and points out that similar forces and ideas are present today. The article also stresses the dangerous complacency that can arise as a result of decision-makers having successfully dealt with a series of crises. European decision-makers also assumed that they could successfully use war as an instrument of policy and largely ignored or explained away the mounting evidence that the advantage in conflict was swinging to the defence. Again, as the author points out, there are disquieting parallels with the present.
`In' analytical NoteInternational Affairs Vol.90, No.1; January 2014: p.59-70
Journal SourceInternational Affairs Vol.90, No.1; January 2014: p.59-70
Key WordsHistorical Puzzle ;  World War - I ;  Conflicts ;  Globalization ;  History ;  Contemporary History ;  Social Darwinism ;  Shifting Power ;  Rising Power ;  Militarism ;  Europe ;  International Politics ;  International Crisis ;  Political Assumption ;  Arms Race ;  Political Ideology ;  Political Stress ;  National Identities ;  National Paradox ;  National Rivalries ;  Imperialism


 
 
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