Hostname: page-component-8448b6f56d-dnltx Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-04-20T01:29:10.129Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Ernst Jäckh and the National Internationalism of Interwar Germany

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  25 September 2019

Peter Weber*
Affiliation:
Auburn University

Abstract

In interwar Germany, internationalism and nationalism coexisted in a public sphere that often transcended national borders. This seeming contradiction helps explain the mindset of an era, which simultaneously recognized interconnectedness while privileging national identity. Historians’ interest in internationalism has primarily focused on liberal and cooperative actors and on some selected examples demonstrating the dark sides of internationalism. Fewer historians, however, have analyzed the ambiguities and contradictions of liberal internationalism and the perseverance of the national as a frame of reference in internationalist discourses. Ernst Jäckh, best known as the founder of the Deutsche Hochschule für Politik, perhaps best represented this collision of values while simultaneously being one of the biggest proponents of such a view. Jäckh's internationalism permeated all his endeavors and served the goal of reintegrating Germany in the international community.

Im Deutschland der Zwischenkriegszeit koexistierten Internationalismus und Nationalismus in einer oft grenzüberschreitenden öffentlichen Sphäre. Dieser scheinbare Widerspruch hilft die Denkweise einer Zeit zu erklären, die sich gleichzeitig der Verbundenheit bewusst war und die nationale Identität betonte. Das Interesse von Historiker*innen am Internationalismus hat sich vornehmlich auf liberale und kooperative Akteur*innen konzentriert, daneben auf einige ausgewählte Beispiele, welche die dunklen Seiten des Internationalismus aufzeigten. Seltener haben Forschende jedoch Ambivalenzen und Widersprüche des liberalen Internationalismus und das Festhalten am Nationalen als Bezugsrahmen internationalistischer Diskurse analysiert. Ernst Jäckh, der vor allem als Begründer der Deutschen Hochschule für Politik bekannt ist, bietet das vielleicht beste Beispiel für diesen Wertekonflikt und war zugleich unter den bedeutendsten Verfechter*innen solcher Anschauungen. Jäckhs Internationalismus durchzog alle seine Bestrebungen und richtete sich auf das Ziel einer Reintegration Deutschlands in die internationale Gemeinschaft.

Type
Article
Copyright
Copyright © Central European History Society of the American Historical Association 2019 

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

Footnotes

The author wishes to thank Gregory Witkowski, as well as the editor and the anonymous reviewers, for their constructive comments on earlier drafts.

References

1 Jäckh, Ernst, The New Germany (London: Oxford University Press, 1927), 95Google Scholar.

2 Jäckh, The New Germany, 70.

3 On German liberalism in the Wilhelmine era see Langewiesche, Dieter, Liberalism in Germany (Princeton, NJ: Macmillan, 2000)Google Scholar; and Sheehan, James, German Liberalism in the Nineteenth Century (Chicago, IL: University of Chicago Press, 1978)Google Scholar. On liberal imperialistic projects and Jäckh's role see Mommsen, Wolfgang, “Wandlungen der liberalen Idee im Zeitalter des Imperialismus,” in Liberalismus und imperialistischer Staat: Der Imperialismus als Problem liberaler Parteien in Deutschland 1890–1914, eds. Holl, Karl and List, Günther (Gӧttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 1975), 109–47Google Scholar.

4 See Gorman, Daniel, The Emergence of International Society in the 1920s (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Mazower, Mark, Governing the World: The History of an Idea (New York: Penguin Press, 2012)Google Scholar; Armitage, David, Foundations of Modern International Thought (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2013)Google Scholar; Sluga, Glenda, Internationalism in the Age of Nationalism (Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2013)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Clavin, Patricia, Securing the World Economy. The Reinvention of the League of Nations, 1920–1946 (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2013)Google Scholar; and Maier, Charles, Once within Borders: Territories of Power, Wealth and Belonging since 1500 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2016)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

5 See the special issues Arsan, Andrew, Lewis, Su Lin, Richard, Anne-Isabelle, “Editorial—The Roots of Global Civil Society and the Interwar Moment,” Journal of Global History 7, no. 2 (2012): 157–65CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Sluga, Glenda and Horne, Julia, “Cosmopolitanism: Its Pasts and Practices,” Journal of World History 21, no. 3 (2010): 369–73CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

6 See, for example, Agents of Internationalism,” special issue, Contemporary European History 25, no. 2 (2016)Google Scholar; Herren, Madeleine, “Fascist Internationalism,” in Internationalisms. A Twentieth-Century History, eds. Sluga, Glenda and Clavin, Patricia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), 191212CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Patel, Kiran Klaus and Reichardt, Sven, “The Dark Side of Transnationalism: Social Engineering and Nazism, 1930s–40s,” Journal of Contemporary History 51, no. 1 (2016): 321CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Bauerkämper, Arnd and Rossoliński-Liebe, Grzegorz, eds. Fascism without Borders. Transnational Connections and Cooperation between Movements and Regimes in Europe from 1918 to 1945 (New York: Berghahn, 2017)Google Scholar.

7 Sluga, Internationalism in the Age of Nationalism.

8 See Berghahn, Volker, “The Debate on ‘Americanization’ among Economic and Cultural Historians,” Cold War History 10, no. 1 (2010): 107–30CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Stephan, Alexander, ed., Americanization and Anti-Americanism. The German Encounter with American Culture after 1945 (New York: Berghahn, 2004)Google Scholar.

9 On the growing interest in transnationalism in German history, see, for example, the H-German Forum on Transnationalism (January 2006); the Forum, “Asia, Germany and the Transnational Turn,” German History 28, no. 4 (December 2010); Conrad, Sebastian, “Double Marginalization: A Plea for a Transnational Perspective on German History,” in Comparative and Transnational History: Central European Approaches and New Perspectives, eds. Haupt, Heinz-Gerhard and Kocka, Jürgen (New York: Berghahn, 2009), 5276Google Scholar; and Pence, Katherine and Zimmerman, Andrew, “Transnationalism,” German Studies Review 35, no. 3 (2012): 495500Google Scholar.

10 One of the first systematic attempts to apply the transnational paradigm to Imperial Germany is Sebastian Conrad and Jürgen Osterhammel, eds., Das Kaiserreich transnational. Deutschland in der Welt, 1871–1914 (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2004). On German colonialism and its influence on the politics, society, and mentality of also later periods, see Naranch, Bradley and Eley, Geoff, eds., German Colonialism in a Global Age (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2014)Google Scholar. For East Germany, see Slobodian, Quinn, ed., Comrades of Color. East Germany and the Cold War World (New York: Berghahn, 2015)Google Scholar. Placing student protest in a transnational arena, see Slobodian, Quinn, Foreign Front: Third World Politics in Sixties West Germany (Durham, NC: Duke University Press, 2012)CrossRefGoogle Scholar. For German philanthropy and humanitarianism in a transnational perspective, see Witkowski, Gregory and Bauerkämper, Arnd, eds., German Philanthropy in Transatlantic Perspective: Perceptions, Exchanges, and Transfers since the Early Twentieth Century (New York: Springer, 2016)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Adam, Thomas, Buying Respectability: Philanthropy and Urban Society in Transnational Perspective (Bloomington: Indiana University Press, 2009)Google Scholar; and Hong, Young Sun, Cold-War Germany, the Third World, and the Global Humanitarian Regime (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015)CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

11 The scholarly debates focused primarily on the development of German political sciences and the continuities (in terms of teaching, research, and personnel) between the DHfP's Weimar and Nazi phases. On the DHfP in the context of the professionalization of German political science, see Lehnert, Detlef, “‘Politik als Wissenschaft.’ Beiträge zur Institutionalisierung einer Fachdisziplin in Forschung und Lehre der Deutschen Hochschule für Politik (1920–1933),” Politische Vierteljahresschrift 30, issue 3 (1989): 443–65Google Scholar; and Söllner, Alfons, “Gruppenbild mit Jäckh. Anmerkungen zur ‘Verwissenschaftlichung’ der Deutschen Hochschule für Politik während der Weimarer Republik,” in Kontinuitäten und Brüche in der deutschen Politikwissenschaft, eds. Göhler, Gerhard and Zeuner, Bodo (Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft, 1991), 4164Google Scholar.

12 Eisfeld, Rainer, Ausgebürgert und doch angebräunt. Deutsche Politikwissenschaft, 1920–1945 (Baden-Baden: Nomos Verlagsgesellschaft, 1991)Google Scholar; and Helke Rausch, “Liberalismus und Nationalsozialismus bei Ernst Jäckh–liberaler Phoenix, Grenzgänger und atlantischer ‘Zivil-Apostel’,” Heuss-Forum, Theodor-Heuss-Kolloquium 2017 (https://www.theodor-heuss-haus.de/fileadmin/user_upload/pics/Unser_Programm/Heuss-Forum/THK_2017/Rausch_Jaeckh.pdf).

13 Gemelli, Giuliana, Fernand Braudel e l'Europa Universale (Venice: Marsilio Editore, 1990)Google Scholar; and Gemelli, Giuliana and MacLeod, Roy, eds., American Foundations in Europe. Grant-Giving Policies, Cultural Diplomacy and Trans-Atlantic Relations, 1920–1980 (Brussels: PIE Lang, 2003)Google Scholar. See also Berghahn, Volker, America and the Intellectual Cold Wars in Europe: Shepard Stone between Philanthropy, Academy and Diplomacy (Princeton, NJ: Princeton University Press, 2001)CrossRefGoogle Scholar, Rausch, Helke, “US Amerikanische ‘Scientific Philanthropy’ in Frankreich, Deutschland und Großbritannien zwischen den Weltkriegen,” Geschichte und Gesellschaft 33 (2007): 7398CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Krige, John and Rausch, Helke, eds., American Foundations and the Coproduction of World Order in the Twentieth Century (Göttingen: Vandenhoeck & Ruprecht, 2012)Google Scholar.

14 Weber, Peter, “Transnational Asymmetries: US Philanthropic Foundations and the German School of Politics in the 1920s and 1930s,” in German Philanthropy in Transatlantic Perspective: Perceptions, Exchanges and Transfers since the Early Twentieth Century, eds. Witkowski, Gregory and Bauerkämper, Arnd (New York: Springer, 2016), 7593CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Rietzler, Katharina, “Before the Cultural Cold Wars: American Philanthropy and Cultural Diplomacy in the Interwar Years,” Historical Research 84, no. 223 (2011): 148–64CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

15 On the role of Naumann in the reformist circles of Imperial Germany see Repp, Kevin, Reformers, Critics, and the Paths of German Modernity. Anti-Politics and the Search for Alternatives, 1890–1914 (Cambridge, MA: Harvard University Press, 2000)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; Krüger, Dieter, “Max Weber and the Younger Generation in the Verein für Sozialpolitik,” in Max Weber and His Contemporaries, ed. Mommsen, Wolfgang (London: Unwin Hyman, 1987), 7087Google Scholar; and Krey, Ursula, “Demokratie durch Opposition: Der Naumann-Kreis und die Intellektuellen,” in Kritik und Mandat: Intellektuelle in der deutschen Politik, eds. Hubinger, Gangolf and Hertfelder, Thomas (Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 2000), 7192Google Scholar.

16 Mommsen, “Wandlungen der liberalen Idee im Zeitalter des Imperialismus.”

17 Naumann, Friedrich, Demokratie und Kaisertum, 2nd edition (Berlin: Buchverlag der “Hilfe,” 1900)Google Scholar.

18 Krey, “Demokratie durch Opposition,” 71–92.

19 On the Munich reform milieu, see Repp, Reformers, Critics, and the Paths of German Modernity, 238–42. Jäckh's account of his origins, relationship with Friedrich Naumann, and political tactics is in his Der Goldene Pflug. Lebensernte eines Weltbürgers (Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1954), 26–44, 85–89, and 184–95.

20 Jäckh, Ernst, Der Goldene Pflug. Lebensernte eines Weltbürgers (Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1954), 81Google Scholar.

21 Naumann, Friedrich, Central Europe (1915; New York: Knopf, 1917)CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Jäckh, Ernst, Das größere Mitteleuropa: ein Werkbund-Vortrag (Weimar: Kiepenheuer, 1916)Google Scholar.

22 Bundesarchiv, Berlin-Lichterfelde (hereafter, BArch), N 3001/29, Friedrich Naumann, Protokoll der ersten Sitzung des Arbeitsausschusses für Mitteleuropa, February 22, 1916.

23 BArch, R 901/2504, Gedankengang des Referates von Dr. Naumann. Enclosed in Friedrich Naumann to Arthur Zimmermann, October 6, 1916.

24 BArch, R 901/2504, Hans Karl von Stein to Richard von Kühlmann, December 18, 1917; and BArch, R 703/4, Friedrich von Payer to Walter Schotte, July 15, 1918.

25 Wintzer, Joachim, Deutschland und der Völkerbund (Paderborn: Ferdinand Schöningh, 2007), 14Google Scholar.

26 Davies, Thomas R., “Internationalism in a Divided World: The Experience of the International Federation of League of Nations Societies, 1919–1939,” Peace & Change 37, no. 2 (2012): 228CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

27 Landesarchiv Berlin, B Rep. 042, Nr. 26394, Deutsche Liga für Völkerbund, Satzung, August 16, 1919, 1.

28 Roeder, Larry Winter Jr. and Simard, Albert, “Die Deutsche Liga für Völkerbund (DLfV),” in Diplomacy and Negotiations for Humanitarian NGOs, eds. Roeder, Larry Winter Jr. and Simard, Albert (New York: Springer, 2013), 384–85CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

29 Wintzer, Deutschland und der Völkerbund, 47–48.

30 BArch, R 58/6278a, Völkerbund, Deutsche Liga für, Bericht über das Jahr 1919 (Berlin: Mittler & Sohn, December 1919)Google Scholar.

31 Davies, “Internationalism in a Divided World,” 232.

32 Wintzer, Deutschland und der Völkerbund, 48.

33 Wintzer, Deutschland und der Völkerbund, 144–45.

34 BArch, R 904/478, Hans Simons to Matthias Erzberger, May 31, 1919, 1.

35 BArch, R 904/478, Hans Delbrück, “Friede – und was nun?” Mitteilungen der Deutschen Liga für Völkerbund, A. 10. 1. 1920.

36 BArch, R 904/478, Ernst Jäckh, “Die Ordnung der Welt – Die Aufgabe des Friedens,” Mitteilungen der Deutschen Liga für Völkerbund, B. 10. 1. 1920.

37 Geheimes Staatsarchiv Preußischer Kulturbesitz (hereafter GStA PK), VI. HA Nl Becker, C. H., Nr. 195, Deutsche Liga für Völkerbund to Carl H. Becker, February 28, 1921.

38 BArch, R 901/72046, Maximilian Müller-Jabusch to Bücherreferat des Auswärtigen Amts, February 4, 1920.

39 BArch, R 901/72046, Hans Simons to Bücherreferat des Auswärtigen Amts, July 2, 1920 and BArch, R 901/72046, Bücherreferat des Auswärtigen Amts to Deutsche Liga für Völkerbund, July 8, 1920.

40 Wintzer, Deutschland und der Völkerbund, 225.

41 Wintzer, Deutschland und der Völkerbund, 197–205.

42 Wintzer, Deutschland und der Völkerbund, 187–88.

43 Wintzer, Deutschland und der Völkerbund, 205–8; and Davies, “Internationalism in a Divided World,” 229–30.

44 BArch, R 58/6278a, Deutsche Liga für Völkerbund, Circular Letter, July 1922.

45 Davies, “Internationalism in a Divided World,” 233; and Wintzer, Deutschland und der Völkerbund, 375–79.

46 Wintzer, Deutschland und der Völkerbund, 466–70; and Davies, “Internationalism in a Divided World,” 233.

47 Pedersen, Susan, “Back to the League of Nations,” The American Historical Review 112, no. 4 (2007): 1091–117CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Clavin, Patricia, “Europe and the League of Nations,” in Twisted Paths: Europe, 1914–1945, ed. Gerwarth, Robert (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2007), 325–54Google Scholar.

48 Laqua, Daniel, “Transnational Intellectual Cooperation, the League of Nations, and the Problem of Order,” Journal of Global History 6, no. 2 (2011): 237–41CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

49 Becker, Carl H., “Über die Förderung der Auslandsstudien,” in Internationale Wissenschaft und nationale Bildung: Ausgewӓhlte Schriften (1917; Köln: Böhlau Verlag, 1997), 157–70Google Scholar.

50 Becker, Carl H., “Kulturpolitische Aufgaben des Reiches,” in Internationale Wissenschaft und nationale Bildung: Ausgewӓhlte Schriften (1919; Köln: Böhlau Verlag, 1997), 236Google Scholar.

51 Becker, “Eine Forderung an die neue Erziehung,” 278.

52 See, for instance, Plehn, Hans, “Eine Hochschule für Politik,” Der Greif 1, no. 10 (1914): 265–72Google Scholar; Spahn, Martin, “Die Pariser politische Hochschule und Frankreichs Wiederaufstieg nach 1871,” Die Grenzboten, no. 79 (January 7, 1920)Google Scholar; and Rühlmann, Paul, “Das Problem: Politische Führer, eine Bildungsfrage,” Preussische Jahrbücher 181, no. 2 (1920): 234–35Google Scholar.

53 Jäckh's speech and the other addresses of the founding ceremony are published in Politische Bildung: Wille, Wesen, Ziel, Weg. Sechs Reden gehalten bei der Erӧffnung der Deutschen Hochschule für Politik (Berlin: Deutsche Verlagsgesellschaft für Politik und Geschichte, 1921). See also Rühlmann, “Das Problem: Politische Führer, eine Bildungsfrage,” 234–35.

54 Ernst Jäckh in Politische Bildung, 31.

55 Jäckh, Ernst, “Das Dritte Jahr. (Staat und Wirtschaft – Wissen und Wille.)Berichte der Deutschen Hochschule für Politik 1, no. 1 (1923–1924): 2Google Scholar. See also GStA PK, I. HA, Rep. 303 neu, Nr. 287, Ausländerzahlen in den Semestern, September 23, 1930.

56 Theodor Heuss, “Denkschrift zur Errichtung einer Deutschen Hochschule für Politik,” in Politische Bildung, 33.

57 Peter Weber, “The Praxis of Civil Society: Associational Life, the Politics of Civility, and Public Affairs in Weimar Germany” (PhD diss., Indiana University, 2014), 145–89.

58 Lehnert, “Politik als Wissenschaft.”

59 Rietzler, Katharina, “Philanthropy, Peace Research and Revisionist Politics: Rockefeller and Carnegie Support for the Study of International Relations in Weimar Germany,” Bulletin of the German Historical Institute, Washington D.C., Supplement 5 (2008): 6179Google Scholar; Weber, “Transnational Asymmetries”; and Korenblat, Steven, “A School for the Republic? Cosmopolitans and Their Enemies at the Deutsche Hochschule für Politik, 1920–1933,” Central European History 39 (2006): 394430CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

60 Jäckh, Der Goldene Pflug, 175.

61 On Jäckh's role in the Treaty of Locarno, see Jäckh, Ernst, Weltstaat. Erlebtes und Erstrebtes (Stuttgart: Deutsche Verlags-Anstalt, 1960), 94101Google Scholar.

62 Weber, “Transnational Asymmetries”; Rietzler, “Philanthropy, Peace Research and Revisionist Politics”; and Korenblat, “A School for the Republic?”

63 For example, Winn, Josef, “Nicholas Murray Butler, the Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, and the Search for Reconciliation in Europe, 1919–1933,” Peace & Change 31, no. 4 (2006): 555–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

64 For example, Troeltsch, Ernst, “Die deutsche Demokratie,” in Troeltsch, Ernst, Spektator-Briefe. Aufsätze über die deutsche Revolution und die Weltpolitik, 1918/22 (1918; Tübingen: Verlag von J. C. B. Mohr, 1924), 305–6Google Scholar; Heuss, Theodor, Deutschlands Zukunft, Zwischen Gestern und Morgen (Stuttgart: Engelhorns, 1919)Google Scholar; and Heuss, Theodor, Die neue Demokratie (Berlin: Siegismund, 1920)Google Scholar.

65 Jäckh, Ernst, “The Spirit of the New Germany,” The Survey 61 (1929): 551Google Scholar; and Jäckh, The New Germany, 36–38.

66 Jäckh, “The Spirit of the New Germany,” 552–53; and Jäckh, The New Germany, 27–34.

67 Jäckh, The New Germany, 64.

68 Jäckh, The New Germany, 51–58.

69 Jäckh, Deutschland, das Herz Europas, 87–94.

70 Jäckh, Ernst, “Germany and the League,” Pamphlet No. 41, Series of 1926–27 (Foreign Policy Association, New York, January 1927): 2–4Google Scholar.

71 Jäckh, “Germany and the League,” 6.

72 von Bernstorff, Heinrich Graf, “Deutschland unter den Weltvölkern und im Völkerbund,” in Zehn Jahre Deutsche Republik. Ein Handbuch republikanischer Politik, ed. Erkelenz, Anton (Berlin: Sieben Stäbe-Verlags- und Druckereigesellschaft, 1928)Google Scholar; and Dernburg, Bernhard, “Die Friedensverträge von 1919 – Ihr Einfluß auf Deutschland und Europa – Der Leidensweg der Reparationen – Der Dawes-Plan,” in Zehn Jahre Deutsche Republik. Ein Handbuch republikanischer Politik, ed. Erkelenz, Anton (Berlin: Sieben Stäbe-Verlags- und Druckereigesellschaft, 1928)Google Scholar. See also the two volumes of Schnee, Heinrich and Draeger, Hans, eds., Zehn Jahre Versailles (Berlin: Brückenverlag, 1929)Google Scholar.

73 Jäckh, Deutschland, das Herz Europas, 14–24.

74 Jäckh, Deutschland, das Herz Europas, 54–60.

75 Jäckh, Deutschland, das Herz Europas, 39–41.

76 Jäckh, Deutschland, das Herz Europas, 43–47, 62–63.

77 Jäckh, The New Germany, 70.

78 Weber, “Transnational Asymmetries,” 76–85.

79 Cited in Weber, “Transnational Asymmetries,” 81.

80 Weber, “Transnational Asymmetries” and Rietzler, “Philanthropy, Peace Research and Revisionist Politics.”

81 Becker, Carl H., “Internationaler Gedanke und nationale Erziehung,” in Internationale Wissenschaft und nationale Bildung: ausgewӓhlte Schriften, ed. Müller, Guido (1928; Köln: Böhlau Verlag, 1997)Google Scholar and GStA PK, VI. HA Nl Becker, C. H., Nr. 8133; Carl H. Becker, “Organisatorische Voraussetzung einer Reichskulturpolitik,” Festrede bei der Feier Dr. Solf's 70. Geburtstag in der Lessing-Hochschule, n.d.

82 Rietzler, “Philanthropy, Peace Research and Revisionist Politics.”

83 GStA PK, VI. HA Nl Schmidt-Ott, F., Nr. 483, Statut der Stresemann-Stiftung, n.d., p. 1.

84 Jäckh, The New Germany, 51.

85 GStA PK, VI. HA Nl Schmidt-Ott, F., Nr. 483, Ernst Jäckh, Protokoll der 1. Sitzung des Praesidiums der Stresemann-Stiftung am 15. Juni 1931, 6–7; and BArch, R43-I/513, Ernst Jäckh, Vertraulicher Bericht über die Entwicklung der Friedensakademie, December 24, 1930.

86 Rietzler, “Philanthropy, Peace Research and Revisionist Politics,” 70–72.

87 GStA PK, I. HA Rep. 303 neu, Nr. 55, Heinrich Brüning to Ernst Jäckh, November 8, 1930.

88 BArch, R43-I/782, Ernst Jäckh to Hermann Pünder, November 11, 1930.

89 BArch, R43-I/513, Ernst Jäckh, Vertraulicher Bericht über die Entwicklung der Friedensakademie, December 24, 1930, 1.

90 BArch, R43-I/513, Aufzeichnungen über den telefonischen Anruf von Reichsminister Dr. Wirth am 6. Juli 1931. Enclosed in Ernst Jäckh to Hermann Pünder, July 11, 1931.

91 BArch, R43-I/513, Ernst Jäckh to Joseph Wirth, July 7, 1931. Enclosed in Ernst Jäckh to Hermann Pünder, July 11, 1931.

92 BArch, R43-I/782, Ernst Jäckh to Erwin Planck, January 7, 1933.

93 Jäckh, Ernst, “German Stress,” The Survey 67 (1931), 261–62Google Scholar, 283–85; BArch, R43-I/163, San Francisco Chronicle, “World Order Changing, Says German Envoy,” October 9, 1931; and Rockefeller Foundation (RF) Archives, Rockefeller Archive Center, Sleepy Hollow, New York (hereafter, RAC), folder 177, box 19, series 717S, RG 1.1, Ernst Jäckh, Confidential Expose, 1. Enclosed in Ernst Jäckh to Edmund E. Day, June 29, 1932.

94 RF Archives, RAC, folder 177, box 19, series 717S, RG 1.1; Ernst Jäckh, Interview with New York Times, June 25, 1932, 2–3; and BArch, R43-I/ 163, Los Angeles Times, “Bruening's Power Cited,” October 15, 1931.

95 BArch, R43-I/163, Deutsches Generalkonsulat San Francisco to Reichskanzlei, October 20, 1931. Also, in his correspondence with Rockefeller Foundation officers, Jäckh voiced his “confidence in Germanys [sic] order and development.” RF Archives, RAC, folder 177, box 19, series 717S, RG 1.1, Ernst Jäckh to Edmund E. Day, March 15, 1932.

96 See, for example, Harley, Eugene, “The Hochschule für Politik: A Significant German Institution for the Teaching of Political Science,” The American Political Science Review 24, no. 2 (1930): 466–69CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

97 BArch, R43-II/948, Ernst Jäckh to Hans H. Lammers, March 24, 1933.

98 BArch, R43-II/948, Ernst Jäckh to Hans H. Lammers, April 24, 1933.

99 BArch, R43-II/948, Ernst Jäckh to Hans H. Lammers, April 16, 1933, 2.

100 RF Archives, RAC, folder 177, box 19, series 717S, RG 1.1, Ernst Jäckh, The Political Situation in Germany, address given at Chatham House on February 6, 1933, 13–14.

101 BArch, R43-II/948, Ernst Jäckh to Adolf Hitler, March 27, 1933.

102 BArch, R4901/1445, Ernst Jäckh, Eröffnung des Lehrgangs für preussische Studienassessoren in der Deutschen Hochschule für Politik, March 27, 1933, 4–5.

103 Rare Book & MS Library, Columbia University Libraries (hereafter designed as RBML), Ernst Jäckh Papers, Series V, Box 16, Scrapbook 29, Ernst Jäckh, “Mitarbeit am neuen Staat,” Berliner Tageblatt, April 16, 1933; and RBML, Ernst Jäckh Papers, Series V, Box 16, Scrapbook 29, Walter Simons, “Mitarbeit am neuen Staat,” Berliner Tageblatt, April 16, 1933.

104 Kurlander, Eric, Living with Hitler: Liberal Democrats in the Third Reich (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2009), 17Google Scholar.

105 BArch, R2/4920, Joseph Goebbels to Reichsminister der Finanzen, May 10, 1933. In his analysis of German political scientists during these fateful months, Rainer Eisfeld reserved pages of acerbic criticism for Ernst Jäckh. He denounced his efforts to portray himself as an uncompromising bulwark of liberalism, and detailed his readiness to compromise with Germany's new political leadership. Jäckh's memoranda and letters of the time contradict his own account in Ernst Jäckh, The War for Man's Soul (New York: Farrar & Rinehart, 1943); and RF Archives, RAC, folder 178, box 19, series 717S, RG 1.1, Ernst Jäckh, Memorandum of Conversation between Reich Chancellor Adolf Hitler, and the President of the Deutsche Hochschule fuer Politik, in the Presence of Secretary of State, Dr. Lammers, Saturday, April 1, 1933. Enclosed in John Van Sickle to Edmund E. Day, April 13, 1933. See Eisfeld, Ausgebürgert und doch angebräunt.

106 GStA PK, VI. HA Nl Schmidt-Ott, F., Nr. 483, Ernst Jäckh to Praesidial-Mitglieder der Stresemann-Stiftung, December 22, 1933; and GStA PK, VI. HA Nl Schmidt-Ott, F., Nr. 956, Julius Curtius to Friedrich Schmidt-Ott, February 14, 1940.

107 BArch, R43-I/514, Julius Curtius to Hans H. Lammers, February 16, 1934; BArch, R43-I/514, Der Staatssekretär in der Reichskanzlei, Rk. 1715, February 21, 1934; and BArch, R43-I/514, Der Staatssekretär in der Reichskanzlei, Zu Rk. 1715, April 10, 1934.

108 GStA PK, VI. HA Nl Schmidt-Ott, F., Nr. 956, Julius Curtius to Friedrich Schmidt-Ott, February 14, 1940.

109 RF Archives, RAC, box 13, RG 12.1, Thomas B. Appleget Officer's Diary, 1934, July 17.

110 RBML, Ernst Jäckh Papers, Series V, Box 11, Scrapbook 19, “Our Purpose,” The New Commonwealth 2, no. 2 (November 1933): 1. For background on Lord David Davies see Porter, Brian, “David Davies: A Hunter after Peace,” Review of International Studies 15, no. 1 (1989): 2736CrossRefGoogle Scholar; and Pugh, Michael C., “An International Police Force: Lord Davies and the British Debate in the 1930s,” International Relations 9, issue 4 (1988): 335–51CrossRefGoogle Scholar. In contrast to the more recent scholarship, both Porter and Pugh place the development of the New Commonwealth Society in a specific English political context.

111 Ashkenazi, Ofer, “Transnational Anti-War Activity in the Third Reich: The Nazi Branch of the New Commonwealth Society,” German History 36, no. 2 (2018): 211–12CrossRefGoogle Scholar. While the NCS never had more than 2,000 members, by 1933 more than 10,000 individuals had subscribed to its publications in Europe.

112 RF Archives, RAC, folder 980, box 74, series 401S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge, Memorandum on Conversation with Jäckh in Paris on February 10–11, 1935, February 13, 1935.

113 For example, BArch, R43-II/948, Ernst Jäckh, Address Given in London on February 7 and 8, 1933, at Meetings of the New Commonwealth, n.d., 1–2; and RF Archives, RAC, folder 177, box 19, series 717S, RG 1.1, Ernst Jäckh, The Political Situation in Germany, address given at Chatham House on February 6, 1933, 23.

114 Ashkenazi, “Transnational Anti-War Activity in the Third Reich,” 217 and RF Archives, RAC, folder 980, box 74, series 401S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge, Memorandum on Conversation with Jaeckh in Paris on February 10–11, 1935, February 13, 1935.

115 Ashkenazi, “Transnational Anti-War Activity in the Third Reich,” 218–19.

116 RF Archives, RAC, box 482, RG 12.1, John van Sickle Officer's Diary, November 10, 1935.

117 Ashkenazi, “Transnational Anti-War Activity in the Third Reich.”

118 Herren, , “Fascist Internationalism,” in Internationalisms. A Twentieth-Century History, ed. Sluga, Glenda and Clavin, Patricia (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2016), 191212CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

119 BArch, R58/6238, The New Commonwealth, “The Pontigny Conference,” The New Commonwealth Monthly 5, no. 12 (September, 1937): 196–200.

120 BArch, R4901/2783, Ottmar Bühler, Bericht über meine Teilnahme an der Pontigny-Tagung des New Commonwealth vom 13. – 23. Aug. 1937, September 19, 1937. Enclosed in Der Rektor, Westf. Wilhelms-Universität to Minister für Wissenschaft, Erziehung und Volksbildung, September 25, 1937.

121 Laqua, “Transnational Intellectual Cooperation, the League of Nations, and the Problem of Order,” 236.

122 BArch, R58/6238, The New Commonwealth, “Our Purpose,” The New Commonwealth Monthly 5, no. 3 (December 1936): 33.

123 BArch, R58/6238, The New Commonwealth, Deutsches Studienkomitee, Vierteljahresbericht, no. 2/3, January, 1937, 3.

124 BArch, R58/6255, Albrecht von Freyberg to David Davies, February 6, 1937; BArch, R58/6255, David Davies to Albrecht von Freyberg, March 25, 1937; BArch, R58/6255, Albrecht von Freyberg to David Davies, May 22, 1937; and BArch, R58/6255, Albrecht von Freyberg to David Davies, June 10, 1937.

125 BArch, R58/6255, SD-Oberabschnitt Ost to Sicherheitshauptamt, March 4, 1937.

126 BArch, R58/6255, Sicherheitshauptamt, Aktenvermerk. Betr. New Commonwealth, July 5, 1937; and BArch, R58/6255, Sicherheitshauptamt, Bericht: Betr. New Commonwealth, July 14, 1937.

127 BArch, R58/6255, Sicherheitshauptamt, Vermerk. Betr. Ernst Jäckh, Leiter des New Commonwealth Institutes in England, n.d. [February 1938].

128 BArch, R58/6255, Bericht: The New Commonwealth, July 1, 1937. Enclosed in Sicherheitshauptamt, Bericht: Betr. New Commonwealth, July 14, 1937, 2.

129 BArch, R4901/3070, The New Commonwealth, Deutsches Studienkomitee, Vierteljahresbericht, Schlussbericht, June 1938.

130 Pugh, “An International Police Force,” 348–50.

131 Ashkenazi, “Transnational Anti-War Activity in the Third Reich,” 228.

132 RF Archives, RAC, folder 941, box 104, series 100S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge to Stacy May, January 9, 1939.

133 RBML, Ernst Jäckh Papers, Series V, Box 11, Scrapbook 19, Ernst Jäckh, “War! – War?” The New Commonwealth Quarterly (December 1938): 314.

134 RBML, Ernst Jäckh Papers, Series V, Box 11, Scrapbook 19, “Ernst Jackh,” The New Commonwealth Quarterly, March 1939, 115.

135 Ashkenazi, “Transnational Anti-War Activity in the Third Reich,” 220–26.

136 RF Archives, RAC, folder 941, box 104, series 100S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge to Sydnor H. Walker, June 23, 1939; and RF Archives, RAC, folder 941, box 104, series 100S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge to William E. Rappard, July 24, 1939.

137 RF Archives, RAC, folder 941, box 104, series 100S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge to Sydnor H. Walker, November 11, 1939.

138 RF Archives, RAC, folder 941, box 104, series 100S, RG 1.1, William E. Rappard to Tracy B. Kittredge, May 30, 1940; RF Archives, RAC, folder 925, box 102, series 100S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge to Joseph H. Willits and Sydnor H. Walker, May 23, 1940; and RF Archives, RAC, folder 925, box 102, series 100S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge to William E. Rappard, May 23, 1940.

139 RF Archives, RAC, folder 925, box 102, series 100S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge to William E. Rappard, April 25, 1940.

140 RF Archives, RAC, folder 926, box 102, series 100S, RG 1.1, Tracy B. Kittredge to William E. Rappard, July 30, 1940.

141 RF Archives, RAC, folder 3793, box 319, series 200S, RG 1.1, Grant in Aid RA SS NO 4059.

142 RF Archives, RAC, folder 3794, box 319, series 200S, RG 1.1, Grant in Aid, RA SS NO 4410. See also RF Archives, RAC, folder 3793, box 319, series 200S, RG 1.1, Joseph H. Willits to Thomas B. Appleget, August 30, 1940.

143 RF Archives, RAC, folder 3793, box 319, series 200S, RG 1.1, Joseph H. Willits to Raymond B. Fosdick, May 23, 1941.

144 RF Archives, RAC, folder 3795, box 319, series 200S, RG 1.1, Joseph H. Willits to Roger F. Evans, May 10, 1944.

145 RF Archives, RAC, folder 3793, box 319, series 200S, RG 1.1, Joseph H. Willits to Thomas B. Appleget, August 14, 1940.

146 RF Archives, RAC, folder 178, box 19, series 717S, RG 1.1, John Van Sickle, Conversation of JVS with Dr. Jäckh, Paris July 17 and 18, 1933, July 18, 1933, 1.

147 Jan-Werner Müller has drawn attention to those theorists and “in-between figures” who mediated between political ideologies and the political justifications that these ideologies needed in order to validate themselves for the masses. Müller, Jan-Werner, Contesting Democracy: Political Ideas in Twentieth-Century Europe (New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2011)Google Scholar. See also Müller, Jan-Werner, “The Triumph of What (If Anything)? Rethinking Political Ideologies and Political Institutions in Twentieth-Century Europe,” Journal of Political Ideologies 14, no. 2 (2009): 211–26CrossRefGoogle Scholar.

148 Struck, Bernhard, Ferris, Kate, and Revel, Jacques, “Introduction: Space and Scale in Transnational History,” The International History Review 33, no. 4 (2011): 573–84CrossRefGoogle Scholar. See also Clavin, “Defining Transnationalism.”

149 Antić, Ana, Conterio, Johanna, and Vargha, Dara, “Conclusion: Beyond Liberal Internationalism,” Contemporary European History 25, no. 2 (2016): 359–71CrossRefGoogle Scholar.