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How do states distinguish friends from enemies, partners from competitors, and communities from outsiders? Community Under Anarchy shows how the development of common social identities among political elites can lead to deeper, more cohesive forms of cooperation than what has been previously envisioned by traditional theories of international relations. Drawing from recent advances in social theory and constructivist approaches, Bruce Cronin demonstrates how these cohesive structures evolve from a series of discrete events and processes that help to diminish the conceptual boundaries dividing societies. Community Under Anarchy supports this thesis through a new and original interpretation of the Concert of Europe, the Holy Alliance, and the political integration of Italy and Germany. In the wake of the upheavals created by the French Revolution and the revolutions of 1848, political elites helped to validate new forms of governance by creating transnational reference groups from which they could draw legitimacy.As a result, European states were able to overcome the polarizing effects of anarchy and create a concert system, a common security association, and two amalgamated security communities. The empirical cases demonstrate how socially derived identities can shape state preferences and create new roles for state leaders.
Bruce Cronin is assistant professor of political science at the University of Wisconsin, Madison.
1. Theory and Concepts 1. The Concept of Transnational Community 2. Transnational Identities and International Politics 2. Transnational Community in Nineteenth Century Europe 3. A Great Power Concert and a Community of Monarchs 4. Constructing a Pan-Italian Community 5. Constructing a Pan-German Community 3. Conclusion 6. Transnational Community in an Anarchic World
This book represents an important contribution to the emerging constructivist literature in international relations dealing with questions of collective identities. -- Thomas Risse, European University Institute, Florence, Italy Political Science Quarterly
Bruce Cronin, City College of New York/CUNY) Cronin, Bruce (Professor and Chair of Political Science, Professor and Chair of Political Science, CRONIN, Cronin
A. Hangleiter, J.-Y. Duboz, K. Kishino, F.A. Ponce, Germany) Hangleiter, A. (Optoelectronics Group, University of Stuttgart, France) Duboz, J.-Y. (Central Research Laboratory, Thomson-CSF, Orsay, Japan) Kishino, K. (Electrical and Electronics Engineering, Sophia University, Tokyo, USA) Ponce, F.A. (Xerox Parc, Palo Alto. CA