Grades 9+
Trade Wars Lead to War
Will today’s trade wars lead to WW III? (2019)
The most apocalyptic article I have ever written (2019)
Grades 11+
The Capitalist Peace (2007)
Trading on Misconceptions: Why World War I Was Not a Failure of Economic Interdependabnce: World War I is generally viewed by both advocates and critics of commercial liberal theory as the quintessential example of a failure of economic integration to maintain peace. Yet this consensus relies on both methodologically flawed inference and an incomplete accounting of the antecedents to the war. Crucially, World War I began in a weakly integrated portion of Europe with which highly integrated powers were entangled through the alliance system. Crises among the highly interdependent European powers in the decades leading up to the war were generally resolved without bloodshed. Among the less interdependent powers in Eastern Europe, however, crises regularly escalated to militarized violence. Moreover, the crises leading to the war created increased incentives for the integrated powers to strengthen commitments to their less interdependent partners. In attempting to make these alliances more credible, Western powers shifted foreign policy discretion to the very states that lacked strong economic disincentives to fight. Had globalization pervaded Eastern Europe, or if the rest of Europe had been less locked into events in the east, Europe might have avoided a “Great War.”
The Achilles’ Heel of Liberal IR Theory?: Globalization and Conflict in the Pre-World War I Era (2012).