Hostname: page-component-586b7cd67f-2plfb Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-11-21T23:51:45.426Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Transatlanticism: A fading paradigm?

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  04 January 2024

Giles Scott-Smith*
Affiliation:
Leiden University College, Faculty of Governance and Global Affairs, Leiden University, The Netherlands
Rights & Permissions [Opens in a new window]

Abstract

In 2018, the first full year of the Trump presidency, it became abundantly clear that the transatlantic relationship had entered a period of intense discord, causing a series of pessimistic reports and commentary in the mainstream Anglo-American media. With this as the starting point, the article re-examines the study of the ‘transatlantic’ as a region. It engages with thinking of time (periodisation), space (scale), and discipline (methodology) in order to question standard assumptions and open up new avenues for research, identity-formation, and emancipatory commitment.

Type
Article
Creative Commons
Creative Common License - CCCreative Common License - BY
This is an Open Access article, distributed under the terms of the Creative Commons Attribution licence (http://creativecommons.org/licenses/by/4.0), which permits unrestricted re-use, distribution and reproduction, provided the original article is properly cited.
Copyright
© The Author(s), 2024. Published by Cambridge University Press on behalf of Fédération Internationale des Sociétés de Philosophie / International Federation of Philosophical Societies (FISP).

2018 was not a great year for talking transatlantically.Footnote 1 In January the New York Times ran an article entitled ‘Is the Transatlantic Relationship Dead?’ which focused on the widening debate in Germany on the significance and meaning of relations with the United States in the era of Trump (Sauerbrey Reference Sauerbrey2018). The paper followed it up in March with another article, ‘The Post-WW II order is under assault from the Powers that built it’, emphasizing that we are witnessing a wider American and European populist-nationalist/populist-nativist revolt against established elites, the international organisations they have led, and the austerity and multiculturalism they have enforced on everyone else (Goodman Reference Goodman2018). In July Foreign Affairs published Graham Allison decrying ‘The Myth of the Liberal Order’ as a construction used to justify the application of US power around the globe since WW II (Allison Reference Allison2018). In August the New York Review of Books followed up with the essay ‘NATO and the Myth of the International Liberal Order’ that pointed out that US criticism of European allies not contributing enough to collective defence had begun already in 1950, and that the US-driven expansion of the Organisation in the 1990s-2000s was based purely on political-economic grounds, not security or strategy (Wood Reference Wood2018). The subsequent backlash from Russia, and the roots of NATO’s slide in credibility, were therefore easy to predict, but at the time ignored. In September it was The Guardian, with ‘The End of Atlanticism: Has Trump killed the Ideology that won the Cold War?’. Remarking with surprise that Atlanticism has been something rarely defined despite its ever-present usage since WW II, the article commented that the term essentially referred to ‘an expression of the possibilities for idealistic American power’ (Schwartz Reference Schwartz2018). And this is just a quick sample of the Anglo-American mainstream liberal media.

The ‘transatlantic’, as a taken-for-granted, meaning-laden term of reference for political, economic, and cultural ties in the northern hemisphere, is therefore an issue for popular debate. This brings to mind Alasdair MacIntyre’s oft-quoted words in After Virtue, when he spoke of the persistence of referring to morality even when its meaning has been emptied out. If we substitute ‘transatlantic’ for ‘morality’, the following passage takes on a special resonance:

What we possess … are the fragments of a conceptual scheme, parts which now lack those contexts from which their significance derived. We possess indeed simulacra of the [transatlantic], we continue to use many of the key expressions. But we have – very largely, if not entirely – lost our comprehension, both theoretical and practical, of the [transatlantic]. (MacIntyre Reference MacIntyre1985: 2)

Clearly we haven’t reached this point yet. But MacIntyre does make us aware of how political, economic, and cultural interests continue to maintain the transatlantic as the primary reference point for geopolitics, in the face of growing evidence to the contrary. ‘Human beings often choose self-delusion over painful reality’, Robert Kagan, the ‘liberal interventionist’ connected to the Brookings Institution, the Council on Foreign Relations, and (formerly) the Project for a New American Century, reminded us in the Washington Post in July 2018 in an assessment of Trump’s aggressive criticism of NATO allies, before concluding that ‘The democratic alliance that has been the bedrock of the American-led liberal world order is unraveling …. The world crisis is upon us’ (Kagan Reference Kagan2018). The transatlantic has been a central anchor for US internationalism since WW II – it if goes, what follows?

There is general agreement that we are in the middle of some form of turning point for transatlantic relations, even if we don’t know what we are turning towards. This could be a realignment of forces (political, economic, cultural), or it could be something more profound. Whatever it may be, we are living through the ending of a particular transatlantic century or modern transatlantic era, and we need to identify and dissect its central motivations, characteristics, and material and ideational consequences to understand how we got here. This has best been attempted by Mary Nolan in The Transatlantic Century. Nolan’s book actually points to the transatlantic century as being the American century, albeit with European characteristics. For her, the mid-century relationship rested on five central pillars: American economic power, American military power, a US-European commonality of Keynesian socio-economic policies and Cold War anti-communism, and Western Europeans’ attraction to American mass culture and acceptance of American political dominance. According to her perspective, ‘the emergence of an integrated and more autonomous Europe’ has caused all facets of American power to gradually fade since the 1970s, culminating in the current situation of major differences in attitude towards war, religion, and neoliberalism (Nolan Reference Nolan2012: 3).

Nevertheless, Nolan’s treatise is very much a materialist understanding of the transatlantic, a classical approach that explains the relationship through socio-economic data and regional integration. She does move the spatial and temporal boundaries to the transatlantic – the starting point of the 1870s is earlier, and the inclusion of Russia is more encompassing than most accounts. But the possibilities for exploring the meaning and usage of the transatlantic in the cultural imagination, and how this has interacted with political designs, stretch far beyond this.

For a good example of that meaning, it is worth going back to the introduction of the term ‘Atlantic Community’ itself. Just over a century ago, in February 1917, New Republic journalist Walter Lippmann published a polemic that argued strongly for US entry into WW I:

The safety of the Atlantic highway is something for which America should fight. Why? Because on the two shores of the Atlantic Ocean there has grown up a profound web of interest which joins together the western world. Britain France, Italy, even Spain, Belgium, Holland, the Scandinavian countries, and Pan-America are in the main one community in their deepest needs and their deepest purposes. They have a common interest in the ocean that unites them. They are to-day more inextricably bound together than most even as yet realize. (Lippmann Reference Lippmann1917: 73)

Lippmann was projecting a common destiny onto the nations bordering the North Atlantic. The transatlantic space represented in his formulation is not simply a national security priority, but a value-laden teleological aspiration – the realization of order, justice, stability, democracy, freedom, ethics, modernity, progress, and the defeat of authoritarianism, use of force, brutality, and deceit. It was unmistakably an elite project, since his fellow internationalists would need to educate the masses on this re-interpretation of national interest. After WW II, Lippmann’s vision of a transatlantic ‘grand narrative’ reduced regional inter-state discord to temporary, secondary status that did not disrupt the structural linkages provided by security interests, economic ties and cultural-ethnic bonds. Lippmann’s rhetoric obviously did not alone sustain an immediate orientation of US foreign policy eastwards, but he did provide one of the foundational arguments for the subsequent promotion of transatlantic relations as somehow organic, running through Clarence Streit’s Union Now and Atlantic Charter movement and the many Cold War manifestations of Western unity. This also generated the idea of ‘the West’, the loose alliance of democratically-inclined states that made up ‘international society’ and that pursued a value-based approach to global affairs (Bonnett Reference Bonnett2004). The traditional approach to the study of transatlantic relations followed these power lines and focused on the political and diplomatic history of the twentieth century. It fused with the rise of the United States as a global power, and the increasing political, economic and cultural investments that it made in Europe after WW II. The study of the transatlantic therefore became part of Cold War area studies, with NATO at its ontological core (Gress Reference Gress1998).

This article will not engage in the debate that focuses on the material and institutional linkages – the levels of ‘embeddedness’ and vulnerability, as it were – that continue to bind North America and Europe. It will not address the extent to which NATO continues to be ‘necessary’, or whether the Transatlantic Trade and Investment Partnership (TTIP) would have revived transatlantic leadership in the global economy. Instead, the focus is on transatlantic studies – the study of the transatlantic region as a particular, unique space – and how we might think of this field in a period when, from the perspective of diplomatic history, the transatlantic as a distinct region has been questioned.

In terms of scholarly communities, it is important to point out that there is a Transatlantic Studies Association (TSA), an international network of history, international relations, and cultural studies scholars, with an associated publication, the Journal of Transatlantic Studies. The Association was founded in 2002 in the UK with a strong Anglo-American outlook, and this continues to represent the core of its organisation. The Association adopts a loose approach to its field of study, stating on its website that it aims to ‘bring together scholars for whom the “transatlantic” is an important frame of reference for their work in a variety of disciplines, including (but not limited to): history, politics and international relations, and literary studies’. The TSA continues to be an important space for cross-disciplinary dialogue but until recently it has not been a site for investigating what we mean with the term ‘transatlantic’, or how we could make use of new approaches to question, open up, or deconstruct its value (Iriye Reference Iriye1979). The strong Anglo-American dimension to the Association has provided stability, but has also implicitly perpetuated assumptions of a ‘special relationship’ and a special role for the UK within the transatlantic as a whole. This outlook has also stabilized in turn the ‘transatlantic’ as an ontological anchor; a necessary constant and not a debatable variable. Nevertheless, the 2022 special issue of the Journal that acknowledged a ‘transnational turn in transatlantic studies’ does point in a broader direction, with its intention to ‘focus on the role of individuals, institutions and ideas that have travelled back and forth across the Atlantic Ocean, largely independent of national governments, to shape political and cultural developments in Europe and the Americas’ (Mills and Post Reference Mills and Post2022: 2).

Borders: Time, space, discipline

The end of the Cold War and its epistemological orthodoxies brought about a transformatory potential for transatlantic studies, moving away from diplomacy towards lines of enquiry utilising sociology, international relations, (human) geography, cultural studies, and anthropology. The transatlantic region is not a continent and it has never benefitted from easily definable boundaries. It is a ‘discursive object’, a construction that reflects cultural, political and economic interests that have invested considerable meaning into it. The transatlantic is therefore as much an idea as a geographical space, and the idea is necessary to give meaning to that space. Lippmann presented one version of this project, a powerful one that resonated throughout politics and the public sphere during the twentieth century. But it was of course not the only one.

Talking of the transatlantic therefore requires some clarification of its limits in space and time. In terms of space, what makes a region a region? Since the 1990s there has been a vibrant debate in International Relations literature on this very question. Security studies has focused on the importance of ‘regional security complexes’ for providing order, while Ernst Haas’s foundation for a functionalist take on incremental institution-building has been revived (Solingen Reference Solingen1998; Buzan and Waever Reference Buzan and Waever2004; Haas Reference Haas2004). Much of this work has given a leading role to states in these processes (Börzel and Risse Reference Börzel and Risse2016). An alternative tack, fuelled by the rise of Constructivism and partly drawing on Karl Deutsch, focused more on the establishment of norms and socialization processes that generate collective identities, shared meanings, and a sense of mutual trust (Adler and Barnett Reference Adler and Barnett1998). Ideas, if made to ‘travel’ in effective ways, can alter perceptions of regional identity and so change the course of political behavior (Risse, Ropp and Sikkink Reference Risse, Ropp and Sikkink1999; Acharya Reference Acharya2004). Drawing on these insights, history has explored the construction of regional identities over time, and the agents of change that have organized the promotion of those identities for specific reasons such as racial or ethnic distinction, class and economic interests, social progress and modernity, or the desire for a peaceful international system (Cándida Smith Reference Cándida Smith2017).

Here it is important to point to the difference between regionalism and regionalization. Regionalism, according to Francesco Duina, focuses on ‘cross-national spaces … [with] legal and bureaucratic structures for the pursuit of codified shared objectives’. In his chapter in the Oxford Handbook of Comparative Regionalism, he could only point to three such institutions in the transatlantic region: NATO, TTIP, and the Comprehensive Economic and Trade Agreement (CETA), and the argument is further weakened by the fact that TTIP never actually came into existence (Duina Reference Duina, Börzel and Risse2016: 133). Strangely, he did not explore regionalization, which according to the editors of the Handbook refers to ‘bottom up, spontaneous and endogenous processes … which involve a variety of non-state actors organized in formal and informal networks’. Such processes often occur ‘among geographically or culturally contiguous states and societies’ (Börzel and Risse Reference Börzel and Risse2016: 8).

In terms of time, the transatlantic is interesting from a regional perspective because of its division into two distinct historiographical periods, which introduces the issue of time, or ‘borders of periodisation’. Firstly, Atlantic history as a field has concentrated on the 15th to the 19th centuries, the time of empires, slavery, and democratic revolutions, with the transatlantic involving both Africa and Latin America as key nodes in the cross-oceanic material, financial, and human transfers. Secondly, there is the Atlantic Community era of the 20th century, called into being first by Lippmann and later chronicled by Mary Nolan, with its focus on Anglo-American common purpose, rule of law, democracy, and modernity. The assumption in traditional historiography was that there existed an identifiable division between the two, set by the end of the slave trade and the American Civil War during the ‘long mid-19th century’. These events did indeed provide the basis for a re-orientation of US foreign policy at the end of the 19th century, and the determination by internationalist elites such as Lippmann that the future power configuration in Europe – and the associated imperial power dynamics around the globe – was of central importance for the future of the United States. In this modern narrative, Africa and Latin America are often reduced to either walk-on parts (admittedly, Lippmann did mention ‘Pan-America’ in Reference Lippmann1917) or complete invisibility, in contrast to their greater prominence in Atlantic history and their importance in relation to transnational studies of transatlantic identity and intellectual history (Gilroy Reference Gilroy1993).

Yet the introduction of new, inter-disciplinary approaches has broken down the alleged distinct boundary between a pre-modern Atlantic World and a modern Transatlantic Century. This is especially the case with the introduction of transnational history, which does not take the nation-state as its prime historical actor or epistemological foundation. Moving beyond ‘methodological nationalism’, transnational history introduces new actors and gives greater significance to material and intellectual cultures and the ways and means by which they travel across borders, causing changes in meaning, identity and behaviour as they do so (Beck Reference Beck2003). Space can be reconfigured and agency redistributed. Systems of governance that do not fit within the framework of the state system, but that have nevertheless possessed influence, are granted greater significance, such as religious orders, or freemasonry. In terms of race, the ‘exclusionist notions’ of the ‘white Atlantic’ have been thoroughly challenged (Vaudagna Reference Vaudagna and Vaudagna2015: 7). The Caribbean, long written out of history as no more than a transit zone for human and material capital, is a sub-region of the transatlantic that has now gained a status of historical significance and separate identity in the pre-modern Atlantic (Kummels et al. Reference Kummels2015; Roper Reference Roper2018). In the modern transatlantic it has not yet gained such a status, it being often regarded as the recipient of other forces and networks, be they imperialist, criminal or meteorological. However, studies of Caribbean Black Power movements and their transnational linkages have countered this dominant narrative by highlighting the agency of Caribbean actors in crafting their own identity and political agendas (Quinn Reference Quinn2014).

In a collection of essays entitled The Transatlantic Reconsidered assembled by Susanne Lachenicht, Charlotte Lerg, and Michael Kimmage, the breaking down of the temporal border between the Atlantic and the transatlantic periods is explored in detail. Referring to the socio-cultural aspects of the transatlantic, Atlantic historians such as Bernard Bailyn have argued that the region has ‘never been wholly discrete, self-enclosed or isolated from the rest of the globe’ (Bailyn Reference Bailyn, Bailyn and Denault2009: 3-4; Reinhardt and Reinhartz Reference Reinhardt and Reinhartz2006; Polasky Reference Polasky2016). Individuals and networks could be analysed outside of interpretive frameworks that have nation-states at their centre, and transatlantic relations have become hybrid or entangled. The foundations of the modern transatlantic, built around the conjuncture of Anglo-American designs for world leadership in the first half of the 20th century, were fundamentally about racial difference and racial superiority, and this imperial mindset of global stewardship had its echoes in the Atlantic Community idea that was carried into the Cold War (Bell Reference Bell2007, Reference Bell2020).

Greater disciplinary diversity and fluidity has therefore challenged the borders of geography and periodization, and ‘transatlantic relations’ as a field of study, in terms of the actors involved and the meanings generated, have become more hybrid and entangled in terms of race, class, and gender (Adam and Gross Reference Adam and Gross2006; Butler Reference Butler2007; Haglund Reference Haglund, Krabbendam and Thompson2012; Honeck, Klimke and Kuhlmann Reference Honeck, Klimke and Kuhlmann2013; Williams Reference Williams2014; Heide and Pisarz-Ramirez Reference Heide and Pisarz-Ramirez2016). As Lachenicht et al. argue, the pre-modern Atlantic World has been re-constructed from ‘a politically motivated heuristic concept to offering a more up-to date framework for inquiry’ that explores the region as a sphere of intellectual discourse and mutual transfer, in doing so providing a model for the exploration of similar systems of exchange in the modern period (Lerg, Lachenicht and Kimmage Reference Lerg, Lachenicht, Kimmage, Lerg, Lachenicht and Kimmage2018: 1-12).

This transnational turn has also been developing successfully in terms of re-investigating the modern period of the transatlantic century. Recent scholarship has emphasized the structural power of networks and the intricate developments in personal mobility, cultural transfer, and political advocacy through the late 19th and early 20th centuries, with the landmark study Atlantic Crossings by Daniel Rodgers forming an important foundation stone (Rodgers Reference Rodgers2009). This turn has also involved a re-assessment of the League of Nations, not as an international institution dominated by imperial powers that attempted to manage inter-state relations, but as a multi-layered network of expertise, informal governance, and transnational networks that spanned the globe (Mazower Reference Mazower2009; Rietzler Reference Rietzler and Laqua2011, Reference Rietzler2014; Gram-Skjoldager, Ikonomou and Kahlert Reference Gram-Skjoldager, Ikonomou and Kahlert2020). Approaching the transatlantic via networks has collapsed the border between the pre-modern and the modern as scholars have looked for antecedents and origins to later movements (Adam Reference Adam2012; Scroop and Heath Reference Scroop and Heath2014). We are now enquiring after ‘multiple Atlantics’, overlapping, sometimes aligning with each other, sometimes diverging (Lachenicht Reference Lachenicht and Middell2018).

Research into the Cold War transatlantic and beyond has also taken a transnational turn, giving rise to a so-called ‘new Cold War history’. International Organisations have been re-conceptualised from monolithic rule-makers to transitory meeting points for globally mobile experts, central nodes for the merging of policy-making and personal networks (Christian, Kott and Matejka Reference Christian, Kott and Matejka2017). Others have explored the role and relevance of ‘informal diplomacy networks’ such as Bilderberg, Jean Monnet’s Action Committee for a United States of Europe, and the Trilateral Commission. These approaches focus on the role of transnational elites in both supplementing and bypassing the state system, and the involvement of statesmen themselves, in the company of other elites from the media, business, and academia, in these informal networks (Grin Reference Grin2008; Knudsen Reference Knudsen2016; Gijswijt Reference Gijswijt2018). The German Historical Institute’s Transatlantic Perspectives project broadened the study of such networks to follow the migratory paths of emigres and forced migrants across the Atlantic and back from 1930-1980 to bring into focus how this large-scale interchange – literally, the study of ‘transatlantic careers’ and the organisations that enabled them – influenced long-term planning, institution-building, academic discourse, mutual perceptions and expectations.Footnote 2 Martin Klimke in The Other Alliance switched attention away from elites and institutions towards the mapping out of transatlantic protest movements during the Vietnam war, in doing so building a dense social dimension to the transnational interpretation (Klimke Reference Klimke2011). Diasporas and exiles are also recognized as forming another pattern of linkages across the transatlantic space, often becoming enveloped by state power designs while still pursuing their own political possibilities through activism, solidarity, and memory (Scott-Smith Reference Scott-Smithforthcoming).

The first wave of transnational history tended towards focusing on the progressive movement of liberal forces for the purpose of improving or supplanting the nation-state system. States were the privileged actors in terms of international treaty and law but the actual advance of specific causes onto the policy-making table relied on the activities of multiple interest groups, lobbying networks, and epistemic communities. Free movement of people and ideas were considered a good thing, and since most academics see themselves as being a part of such a cosmopolitan community, it is understandable that they often devoted the most attention to showing how these connections came about. The predominant view was that transnationalism represented progressive forces for good. Yet there has been a push-back against this liberal trend as others have emphasized the negative side to transnational connections and the ‘forces of internationalism’. Interconnectedness is not by default progressive, as research into the transnational right has shown (Reinisch Reference Reinisch2016).

The current conjunction of anti-establishment, anti-immigrant, nationalist-populist political movements on both sides of the ocean combining in their efforts to undermine the institutions of transatlantic order is a stark present-day reminder. Add the role of Russia in fomenting this discord for its own divide-and-disrupt strategy of survival, (Shane and Mazzetti Reference Shane and Mazzetti2018) and the rise of a transatlantic alt-right starts to look like a contributor to a potential re-alignment of political forces across (almost) the entire region. Should this trend continue, the result will not simply be the spread of illiberalism but the increasing ungovernability of the transatlantic region, a stark reversal of the vision put forward by Lippmann a century ago and repeated by countless others since, that placed the region at the centre of global progress. And while these political forces express their strength with a rhetoric of revival (Make America Great Again, Alternative for Germany), this is a zero-sum political game with a blatant return to enforcing lines of racial exclusion and rejecting cosmopolitan multiculturalism in the name of ‘the nation’, ‘the West’, ‘civilisation’, or whichever vessel may be appropriate for the campaign at any given time and place. Coalitions of the unwilling possess considerable force in today’s politics.

It was these developments, along with economic stresses and an increasingly fragile consensus on security priorities, that lay behind the claim that the thirty years after the end of the Cold War represent a distinct ‘transatlantic era’ that is now coming to an end. In short, the period after 1989

appeared to present an opportunity for establishing a world order based on international law, democratic principles, free-market capitalism, and Western leadership, grounded on the fundamental relationship between North America and Europe. It was, in many ways, a repeat of the ‘1945 moment’ when the United States possessed unparalleled power and influence, only this time with a greater European involvement. The era of transatlantic dominance in global governance seemed at hand. (Boxhoorn and Scott-Smith Reference Boxhoorn and Scott-Smith2022: 1)

The argument is that political, economic, and socio-cultural interests are diverging on a structural level, such that it is not appropriate to refer to a temporary decline in transatlantic relations whereby a new President (such as Joe Biden after Donald Trump) can somehow reverse the trend. The ‘transatlantic era’ was exactly ‘a definable era when those nations had the potential to define the contours of that global governance in its own image’, and a combination of both internal (rise of right-wing populism, inequality, changing demographics, loss of cohesion) and external (rising powers and coalitions, new threats to national sovereignty) pressures was making this no longer a viable aspiration (Boxhoorn and Scott-Smith Reference Boxhoorn and Scott-Smith2022: 2). Evidence for this view was vividly present at the Munich Security Conference in February 2020, the central theme for the discussions being an omnipresent ‘Westlessness’ in terms of losing control of the global agenda not only on peace and security but also in the provision of global public goods (Scott-Smith Reference Scott-Smith2020). The Covid-19 pandemic that soon followed only exacerbated divisions both within the European Union and between the EU and President Trump’s United States. The attack on Ukraine by Russia in late February 2022 initially appeared to revitalise Western unity and solidarity, with support for Ukrainian war refugees combining with a large-scale supply of arms to repel the invader. By late 2023 the context had changed, with the United States Congress in political gridlock and electorates across the transatlantic region beginning to question the need for a long-term conflict with Russia. In other words, what looked at first like a transatlantic revival based upon repelling a common threat, instead in a relatively short time became a source of discord due to the underlying structural trends towards fragmentation and divergence.

Some Conclusions: Where to go from here?

From an IR perspective, the focus for many continues to be on the crucial nature of US-EU relations for the systems of global governance. The 1990s and early 2000s were designated the era of ‘New Transatlanticism’ as the two ‘adversarial partners’ sought to manage their deep economic and financial ties and coordinate via international institutions in a period of relative political divergence (McGuire and Smith Reference McGuire and Smith2008; Simoni Reference Simoni2013; Buonanno, Cuglesan and Henderson Reference Buonanno, Cuglesan and Henderson2015). Scholars search for the ‘deep policy networks’ in fields such as biotech, energy, climate change, and intelligence that indicate channels of expertise are still functioning effectively. As Gabriella Paar-Jakli has shown, these kinds of actors are not only valuable as conduits for change, but also for plugging ‘structural holes’ in the fabric of state-centred governance (Paar-Jakli Reference Paar-Jakli2014).

A step further examines what is referred to as the ‘transnational transatlantic’, reflecting on the ongoing, and in many ways increasingly important, role of non-state actors in giving meaning to transatlantic relations in an era when the state-based anchors of treaties and alliances are starting to look weaker. As stated above, this involves using the ‘transatlantic turn’ to highlight additional forms of governance practiced via the non-state sector. A prime example of such an actor is the German Marshall Fund, which invests heavily in developing a transatlantic expert dialogue in policy-relevant fields, but does so simultaneously with network-building that blends the transatlantic with the Asia-Pacific, Latin America, and Africa. The rise of city diplomacy, related to the increasing importance of cities in forms of governance that link the local, national, regional, and global, is another area where paradiplomatic connections are pointing the way towards a different understanding of the transatlantic and its shifting socio-economic, political, and policy ties (Scott-Smith Reference Scott-Smith, Lerg, Lachenicht and Kimmage2018, Reference Scott-Smith and Ohnesorge2023).

In their study of regionalism, Tanja Borzel and Thomas Risse define a ‘regional order’ as involving ‘various combinations of regionalization and regionalism in a particular region …. Encompassing both bottom-up processes of economic, political, social, and cultural exchange (regionalization) and formal as well as informal state-led institution-building (regionalism)’ (Börzel and Risse Reference Börzel and Risse2016: 9). Louise Fawcett has likewise remarked on how ‘our understanding of regions naturally flows into a concept of regionalism as a policy and project whereby states and non-state actors cooperate and coordinate strategy within a given region’ (Fawcett Reference Fawcett and Farell2005: 24). These are neat, political-science type definitions, but they do not capture the fluidity of a region such as the transatlantic, where borders in time and space are becoming more ill-defined.

But it is also necessary to move away from a focus on top-down, elite-focused, expert-based initiatives in the study of the modern transatlantic (a turn that the earlier Atlantic History achieved some time ago). There is the transatlantic of the dispossessed, a bottom-up perspective on those who have experienced the repressive application of capitalism, racism, and discrimination within the US-European core. The historical baggage carried by the transatlantic narrative, in terms of haves and have-nots, victors and victims, should be brought from the margins to the centre of investigation. Paul Gilroy wrote The Black Atlantic as a way to undermine and reconstruct European white identity and the nation-state as the prime vessel of historical meaning (Gilroy Reference Gilroy1993). As we know all too well, systems of inequality are deeply embedded in the home of liberal freedoms. As Walter Mignolo argues, social behaviours and world views marked by ‘coloniality’ are always just under the surface (Mignolo Reference Mignolo2005; Lachenicht Reference Lachenicht and Middell2018, Reference Lachenicht and Depkat2019). Likewise, Walter Benjamin reminds us that ‘There is no document of civilisation which is not at the same time a document of barbarism’ (Benjamin Reference Benjamin1968). The transatlantic should be reclaimed as a space for a critical engagement with unequal social, economic, and political structures of power, not in terms of divisiveness as the transatlantic alt-right proclaims, but in terms of what Charles Postel refers to as ‘the historical traditions of democratic political mobilizations of the working people for a more just, equitable, and humane society’ (Postel Reference Postel2017). The many forms of social solidarity and protest crossing the Atlantic, from the peace and anti-nuclear movements of the Cold War to Occupy, Black Lives Matter and #MeToo as the most prominent examples in the post-Cold War, illustrate Postel’s point. It is the job of historians to expose and preserve those ties through the centuries that have made the transatlantic as much a space for mobility and emancipation as for hierarchy and order.

Footnotes

1 This article is a revised and updated version of Scott-Smith (Reference Scott-Smith2017).

References

Acharya, A (2004) How ideas spread: Whose norms matter? Norm localization and institutional change in Asian Regionalism. International Organization 58, 239275.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adam, T (2012) Intercultural Transfers and the Making of the Modern World, 1800-2000. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Adam, T and Gross, R (eds) (2006) Traveling between Worlds: German-American Encounters. College Station, TX: Texas A&M UP.Google Scholar
Adler, E and Barnett, M (1998) Security Communities. Cambridge: Cambridge UP.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allison, G (2018) The Myth of the Liberal Order. Foreign Affairs 97.Google Scholar
Bailyn, B (2009) Introduction: Reflections on some major themes. In Bailyn, B and Denault, PL (eds), Soundings in Atlantic History: Latent Structures and Intellectual Currents, 15001830. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP, 143.Google Scholar
Beck, U (2003) Toward a new critical theory with a cosmopolitan intent. Constellations 10, 453468.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, D (2007) The Idea of Greater Britain: Empire and the Future of World Order 1860-1900. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bell, D (2020) Dreamworlds of Race: Empire and the Utopian Destiny of Anglo-America. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP.Google Scholar
Benjamin, W (1968) Illuminations. New York, NY: Schocken Books.Google Scholar
Bonnett, A (2004) The Idea of the West: Culture, Politics and History. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Börzel, T and Risse, T (eds) (2016) The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Regionalism. Oxford: Oxford UP.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Boxhoorn, B and Scott-Smith, G (2022) The Transatlantic Era (1989-2020) in Documents and Speeches. New York, NY: Routledge.Google Scholar
Buonanno, L, Cuglesan, N and Henderson, K (eds) (2015) The New and Changing Transatlanticism: Politics and Policy Perspectives. New York, NY: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Butler, L (2007) Critical Americans: Victorian Intellectuals and Transatlantic Liberal Reform. Chapel Hill, NC: University of North Carolina Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Buzan, B and Waever, O (2004) Regions and Powers: The Structure of International Security. Cambridge: Cambridge UP.Google Scholar
Cándida Smith, R (2017) Improvised Continent: Pan-Americanism and Cultural Exchange. Philadelphia, PA: University of Pennsylvania Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Christian, M, Kott, S and Matejka, O (2017) International organisations in the cold war: The circulation of experts between East and West. Studia Territorialia 17, 3560.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Duina, F (2016) North America and the transatlantic area. In Börzel, T and Risse, T (eds), The Oxford Handbook of Comparative Regionalism. Oxford: Oxford UP, 154177.Google Scholar
Fawcett, L (2005) Regionalism from an historical perspective. In Farell, M et al. (eds), The Global Politics of Regionalism: Theory and Practice. London: Pluto, 2137.Google Scholar
Gijswijt, T (2018) Informal Diplomacy: The Bilderberg Group and Transatlantic Relations during the Cold War, 1952-1968. London: Routledge.Google Scholar
Gilroy, P (1993) The Black Atlantic: Modernity and Double Consciousness. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP.Google Scholar
Goodman, P (2018) The post-war order is under assault from the powers that built it. New York Times, March 26 , https://www.nytimes.com/2018/03/26/business/nato-european-union.html.Google Scholar
Gram-Skjoldager, K, Ikonomou, H and Kahlert, T (eds) (2020) Organizing the 20th-Century World: International Organizations and the Emergence of International Public Administration, 1920-1960s. London: Bloomsbury.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Gress, D (1998) From Plato to NATO: The Idea of the West and its Opponents. New York, NY: Free Press.Google Scholar
Grin, G (2008) Jean Monnet’s action committee for a United States of Europe and the origins of the treaties of Rome. Relations Internationales 4, 2132.Google Scholar
Haas, E (2004) The Uniting of Europe: Political, Economic and Social Forces, 1950-57. Notre Dame, IN: University of Notre Dame Press.Google Scholar
Haglund, D (2012) That other transatlantic “great rapprochement”: France, the United States, and Theodore Roosevelt. In Krabbendam, H and Thompson, J (eds), America’s Transatlantic Turn – Theodore Roosevelt and the ‘Discovery’ of Europe. London: Palgrave Macmillan, 103120.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heide, M and Pisarz-Ramirez, G (eds) (2016) Hemispheric Encounters: The Early United States in a Transnational Perspective. New York, NY: Peter Lang.Google Scholar
Honeck, M, Klimke, M and Kuhlmann, A (eds) (2013) Germany and the Black Diaspora: Points of Contact, 1250-1914. New York, NY: Berghahn.Google Scholar
Iriye, A (1979) Culture and power in international relations and intercultural relations. Diplomatic History 10, 115128.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Klimke, M (2011) The Other Alliance: Student Protest in West Germany and the United States in the Global Sixties. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP.Google Scholar
Knudsen, D (2016) The Trilateral Commission and Global Governance: Informal Elite Diplomacy, 1972-1982. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kummels, I et al. (eds) (2015) Transatlantic Caribbean: Dialogues of People, Practices, Ideas. New York, NY: Columbia UP.Google Scholar
Lachenicht, S (2018) Transregions from early colonization to post-cold war: Multiple Atlantics. In Middell, M (ed), Routledge Handbook of Transregional Studies. London: Routledge, 95101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lachenicht, S (2019) How the Americas Came to be Known as “the Americas”. In Depkat, V et al. (eds), Cultural Mobility and Knowledge Formation in the Americas. Heidelberg: Winter, 1330.Google Scholar
Lerg, C, Lachenicht, S and Kimmage, M (2018) Introduction. In Lerg, C, Lachenicht, S and Kimmage, M (eds), The Transatlantic Reconsidered. Manchester: Manchester UP.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lippmann, W (1917) Defense of the Atlantic World. New Republic 17, 6975.Google Scholar
MacIntyre, A (1985) After Virtue: A Study in Moral Theory. London: Duckworth.Google Scholar
Mazower, M (2009) No Enchanted Palace: The End of Empire and the Ideological Origins of the United Nations. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP.Google Scholar
McGuire, S and Smith, M (2008) The European Union and the United States: Competition and convergence in the global arena. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mignolo, W (2005) The Idea of Latin America. Oxford: Blackwell.Google Scholar
Mills, T and Post, C (2022) The “transnational turn” in transatlantic studies. Journal of Transatlantic Studies 20, 113.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Nolan, M (2012) The Transatlantic Century: Europe and America, 1890-2010. Cambridge: Cambridge UP.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Paar-Jakli, G (2014) Networked Governance and Transatlantic Relations: Building Bridges through Science Diplomacy. London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Polasky, J (2016) Revolutions without Borders: The Call to Liberty in the Atlantic World. New Haven, CT: Yale UP.Google Scholar
Postel, C (2017) What we talk about when we talk about populism. Raritan 37(2), 133155.Google Scholar
Quinn, K (2014) Black Power in the Caribbean. Gainesville, FL: University of Florida Press.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Reinhardt, S and Reinhartz, D (eds) (2006) Transatlantic History. College Station, TX: Texas A&M UP.Google Scholar
Reinisch, J (2016) Introduction: Agents of internationalism. Contemporary European History 25, 95105.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rietzler, K (2011) Experts for peace: Structures and motivations of philanthropic internationalism in the United States and Europe. In Laqua, D (ed) Internationalism Reconfigured: Transnational Ideas and Movements between the World Wars. London: I.B. Tauris, 4565.Google Scholar
Rietzler, K (2014) Fortunes of a Profession: American Foundations and International Law, 1910-1939. Global Society 28, 823.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Risse, T, Ropp, S and Sikkink, K (1999) The Power of Human Rights: International Norms and Domestic Change. Cambridge: Cambridge UP.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rodgers, D (2009) Atlantic Crossings. Cambridge, MA: Harvard UP.Google Scholar
Roper, LH, ed (2018) The Torrid Zone: Caribbean Colonization and Cultural Interaction in the Long Seventeenth Century. Columbia, SC: University of South Carolina Press, 2018.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sauerbrey, A (2018) Is the transatlantic relationship dead?. New York Times, Jan 3 , https://www.nytimes.com/2018/01/03/opinion/germany-trans-atlantic-america.html.Google Scholar
Schwartz, M (2018) The End of Atlanticism: Has Trump Killed the Ideology that Won the Cold War?. The Guardian, Sep 4 , https://www.theguardian.com/news/2018/sep/04/atlanticism-trump-ideology-cold-war-foreign-policy.Google Scholar
Scott-Smith, G (2017) Le transatlantisme: Un paradigme sur le déclin?. Diogène, 258/259/260: 221236.Google Scholar
Scott-Smith, G (2018) The Transnational transatlantic: Private organizations and governmentality. In Lerg, C, Lachenicht, S and Kimmage, M (eds) The Transatlantic Reconsidered. Manchester: Manchester UP, 7697.Google Scholar
Scott-Smith, G (2020) Westeloosheid. Liberale Reflecties 4(1), 4349.Google Scholar
Scott-Smith, G (2023) A New Urban Agenda? US Cities, soft power, and transatlantic relations. In Ohnesorge, H (ed), Soft Power and the Future of US Foreign Policy. Manchester: Manchester UP, 236254.Google Scholar
Scott-Smith, G (forthcoming) Exiles on main street: Cold war intellectuals, diasporas, and the transatlantic community. The Exile History Review 2.Google Scholar
Scroop, D and Heath, A (2014) Transatlantic Social Politics: 1800-Present. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.Google Scholar
Shane, S and Mazzetti, M (2018) The Plot to Subvert an Election. New York Times, Sep 20 , https://www.nytimes.com/interactive/2018/09/20/us/politics/russia-interference-election-trump-clinton.html.Google Scholar
Simoni, S (2013) Understanding Transatlantic Relations: Whither the West? London: Routledge.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Solingen, E (1998) Regional Orders at Century’s Dawn: Global and Domestic Influences on Grand Strategy. Princeton, NJ: Princeton UP.Google Scholar
Vaudagna, M (2015) Introduction. In Vaudagna, M (ed), Modern European-American Relations in the Transatlantic Space. Turin: Otto, 710.Google Scholar
Williams, A (2014) France, Britain and the United States in the Twentieth Century 1900-1940: A Reappraisal. New York, NY: Palgrave Macmillan.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wood, T (2018) NATO and the myth of the liberal international order. New York Review of Books, Aug 21 , https://www.nybooks.com/daily/2018/08/21/nato-and-the-myth-of-the-liberal-international-order.Google Scholar