Trade and treaties: balancing the interstate system

Book Chapter ResearchOnline@JCU
Alimento, Antonella;Stapelbroek, Koen
Abstract

This chapter sets up the main narrative of the book as a history of the relation between the practice of the conclusion of commercial treaties and theoretical reflection on the political-economic ordering potential of commercial treaties in the light of the problem of ‘jealousy of trade’. The argument explains the main tensions, distinctions and conceptual oppositions involved in the dynamic of the rise, fall and re-rise of commercial treaties as the chosen instruments by politicians and writers for preserving a general European peace along with a system of trade development adhered to by all European states. The ‘arch’ thus set up connects the ideas of a great number of political writers from the time of the Peace of Westphalia to the Napoleonic Wars. The chapter identifies the constant conceptual reference points and shifting outlooks onto how commercial treaties might regulate European trade competition. The gradual replacement of ‘privilege’ with the principle of ‘equality’ explains the succession of three stages in the life-cycle of commercial treaties as instruments shaping the balance of power through the balance of trade. All of the commercial treaties that were concluded in the long eighteenth century were both connected to the main political events, conflicts and schemes of the time and to the political writings of a range of authors from Saint-Pierre and Bolingbroke to Adam Smith and beyond. Seen in this light, the subject of commercial treaties provides an opportunity for the creation of new paradigm for thinking about the political economy of the international order in the eighteenth century.

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Publication Name

The Politics of Commercial Treaties in the Eighteenth Century: Balance of Power, Balance of Trade

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ISBN/ISSN

978-3-319-53573-9

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Pages Count

75

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Publisher

Palgrave Macmillan

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Publisher Location

Cham, Switzerland

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DOI

10.1007/978-3-319-53574-6_1