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Intervention and non-intervention in international society: Britain's responses to the American and Spanish Civil Wars

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 September 2013

Abstract

This article aims to show that from the end of the eighteenth century, international order began to be defined in terms of ground rules relating to non-intervention and intervention, with the former being prioritised over the latter. After the Napoleonic wars, within continental Europe there was an attempt to consolidate an intervention ground rule in favour of dynastic legitimacy over the right of self-determination. By contrast, the British and Americans sought to ensure that this ground rule was not extended to the Americas where the ground rule of non-intervention was prioritised. During the nineteenth century, it was the Anglo-American position which came to prevail. Over the same period international order was increasingly bifurcated with the non-intervention ground rule prevailing in the metropolitan core and with the intervention ground rules prevailing in the periphery. This article, however, only focuses on the metropolitan core and draws on two case studies to examine the non-intervention ground rule in very different circumstances. The first examines the British response to the American Civil War in the 1860s during an era of stability in the international order. The second explores the British Response to the Spanish Civil War in the 1930s when the international order was very unstable and giving way to a very different international order.

Type
Articles
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 2013 

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References

1 According to Vincent, a ground rule reflects the existence of a general principle or imperative ‘which makes a particular form of action or restraint obligatory’ for all the member states in an international society. If a ground rule changes, then the character of the prevailing international order changes while non-observance of a ground rule provides evidence of instability within an international order. See Vincent, R. J., Nonintervention and International Order (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1974), p. 20Google Scholar.

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