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Essay / Research Paper Abstract
This 8 page paper looks at the influence of the Westphalia Treaties on the way international politics has developed, assessing the way that they are still impacting on the modern world. The paper then goes on to examine the way the concepts of these treaties may be undermined by the increasing level of globalization. The bibliography cites 7 sources.
Page Count:
8 pages (~225 words per page)
File: TS65_TEwestpol.doc
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Unformatted sample text from the term paper:
a significant impact on international relations and the way politics is perceived. However, just as the world changed evolved with the Westphalia Treaties, politics and political thought did not stop
evolving with the signing of these treaties. When examining the impact of these treaties it may also be argued that in modern society has changed significantly since the 17th century,
and the increasing trend was globalisation may be undermining the Westphalia world order. To appreciate the importance of the Westphalia Treaties to international relations it is necessary to first look
at what they were and how they changed the political world of the time. The treaties were signed in a period following lengthy warfare, pending two major wars. The first
war was the Thirty Years War which had taken place between 1618 and 1648 in central Europe. This was a war caused by many complex issues, and although it was
initially seen in religious terms as a war taking place between Protestant and Catholic, it gradually escalated it became more complex, including many internal and cross-border political issues as well
as becoming a continuation of the Bourbon- Habsburg rivalry (Wilson, 2009). The second war that the treaties brought to an end was the Eighty Year War which had been raging
between the Dutch Republic and Spain between 1568 and 1648. The war came to an end when Spain finally recognised the sovereign independence of the Dutch Republic (Anderson, 1996). It
has been argued that the key aspect of these treaties was the way in which they changed the way the nation-state was perceived, creating the modern system of a nation
state being defined by its territory (Anderson, 1996). Prior to the treaties territorially was seen as a relatively temporary factor, as international borders tended to be fluid or flexible, reflecting
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