Book contents
- The New Atlantic Order
- The New Atlantic Order
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Maps
- Introduction
- Part I Inevitable Descent into the Abyss?
- Part II The Greatest War – and No Peace without Victory
- Part III Reorientations and Incipient Learning Processes
- Part IV No Pax Atlantica
- Epilogue The Political Consequences of the Peace
- 22 Peace Undermined
- 23 Towards a New Order
- 24 The Remarkable Consolidation of the Nascent Pax Atlantica of the 1920s
- Final Perspectives The Cadmeian Peace
- Bibliography
- Index
Final Perspectives - The Cadmeian Peace
The Eventual Creation of the Long Twentieth Century’s Atlantic Order after 1945 and the Crucial Lessons of the Era of the First World War
from Epilogue - The Political Consequences of the Peace
Published online by Cambridge University Press: 22 April 2022
- The New Atlantic Order
- The New Atlantic Order
- Copyright page
- Dedication
- Contents
- Acknowledgements
- Abbreviations
- Maps
- Introduction
- Part I Inevitable Descent into the Abyss?
- Part II The Greatest War – and No Peace without Victory
- Part III Reorientations and Incipient Learning Processes
- Part IV No Pax Atlantica
- Epilogue The Political Consequences of the Peace
- 22 Peace Undermined
- 23 Towards a New Order
- 24 The Remarkable Consolidation of the Nascent Pax Atlantica of the 1920s
- Final Perspectives The Cadmeian Peace
- Bibliography
- Index
Summary
The conclusion offers new perspectives on how after the crises of the 1930s and the even more horrific Second World War a more durable Atlantic order for the “long” 20th century could be created – an order that was founded as a western system led by the new American superpower and rested on the Marshall Plan, the European Recovery Program and the North Atlantic Treaty Organisation. Reappraising the global significance of these developments, it emphasises that what the principal American and west European decision-makers constructed was not just propelled by the escalating cold war with the Soviet Union but rather, on a deeper level, the outgrowth of longer-term learning processes: attempts to draw deeper lessons not only from the rise of National Socialism, authoritarianism and Stalinism and the Second World War but also from the earlier crises and catastrophes of the “long” 20th century, particularly the First World War and the deficient or unfinished efforts to create a modern international system in its aftermath. Finally, it reflects on the challenges of preserving a functioning and legitimate Atlantic and global order in the early 21st century.
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- The New Atlantic OrderThe Transformation of International Politics, 1860–1933, pp. 999 - 1005Publisher: Cambridge University PressPrint publication year: 2022