A dramatic shift in British and French ideas about empire
unfolded in the sixty years straddling the turn of the nineteenth
century. As Jennifer Pitts shows in "A Turn to Empire," Adam Smith,
Edmund Burke, and Jeremy Bentham were among many at the start of
this period to criticize European empires as unjust as well as
politically and economically disastrous for the conquering nations.
By the mid-nineteenth century, however, the most prominent British
and French liberal thinkers, including John Stuart Mill and Alexis
de Tocqueville, vigorously supported the conquest of non-European
peoples. Pitts explains that this reflected a rise in
civilizational self-confidence, as theories of human progress
became more triumphalist, less nuanced, and less tolerant of
cultural difference. At the same time, imperial expansion abroad
came to be seen as a political project that might assist the
emergence of stable liberal democracies within Europe.
Pitts shows that liberal thinkers usually celebrated for
respecting not only human equality and liberty but also pluralism
supported an inegalitarian and decidedly nonhumanitarian
international politics. Yet such moments represent not a necessary
feature of liberal thought but a striking departure from views
shared by precisely those late-eighteenth-century thinkers whom
Mill and Tocqueville saw as their forebears.
Fluently written, "A Turn to Empire" offers a novel assessment
of modern political thought and international justice, and an
illuminating perspective on continuing debates over empire,
intervention, and liberal political commitments.
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