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A review of "Building Cosmopolis: The political
thought of H G Wells", by John S Partington (Ashgate Publishing)
The British author H G Wells is mainly known today for
novels such as Kipps, or The History of Mr Polly, and science
fantasies about Martian invasion in War of the Worlds or the experiments
of a ruthless transplant surgeon in The Island of Dr Moreau. Very
few present-day readers are now aware of his political writings and his
campaign for World Government. John S Partington's analysis of Wells'
political thought in Building Cosmopolis: The Political Thought of
H G Wells is therefore particularly welcome.
Born in 1866, Wells studied biology under T H Huxley,
the leading Darwinian of Victorian times, and came to see the ethical
principles underlying humanity's social systems as being rooted in the
evolutionary process, and therefore having the potential for onward development.
Early in his career he proposed extending social structures to the global
level by means of a "permanent international Congress ...which will
insure the peace of the world".
His initial account of how such a Congress would function
remained in some aspects tantalisingly vague. He foresaw national governments
continuing as the custodians of the common law and international trade
while acting as an intermediary between the Congress and their own municipal
governments, thus combining some centralised power with subsidiarity wherever
possible. This sounds basically federalist, yet the centralised competences
he suggests would cover criminal law, prisons, registration of births
and deaths, and the right to direct people to work in whatever part of
the world they may be needed. In addition everyone would have identity
documents bearing their thumb-print, and English to be the world language.
Such a world would hardly be regarded today as a utopia,
though the ideas are not untypical of some of the wilder theories being
discussed in late Victorian Britain, partly at least as a reaction to
the growth of state nationalism in Europe. Declarations of patriotic pride
were too often accompanied by a determination to build and maintain military
superiority while expanding overseas empires; though in some cases, such
as Greece, nationalist movements were primarily linked with the fight
for liberty and independence. At the same time ethnically-based cross-border
groupings were beginning to appear. Wells quotes Anglo-Saxon, Pan-Germanic
and Pan-Slav movements, each expressive of shared cultural identity, and
he foresaw a role for such regional groupings within the world Congress.
Some groupings, such as the British, French and other
empires, would be broken up. Instead, they would evolve systems of democratic
autonomy in each of their subject states, leading them gradually to the
point where they could join their imperial masters as equal group partners
within the world community.
Understandably, his ideas developed with the changing
political scene, and much of the value of Building Cosmopolis lies
in its demonstration of how this occurred and the arguments at each stage.
With the outbreak of World War I Wells refined his proposal, envisaging
a League of Free Nations endowed with a common law and a tribunal or court
with the task of ensuring peace by settling disputes through arbitration,
protecting weaker communities, and suppressing member states' preparations
for war. But although the subsequent establishment of the League of Nations
in 1919 might have seemed a vindication of Wells' own ideas, he saw it
as being tainted with traditional diplomacy-that is, with the very methods
which led to wars in the first place. He wanted, in effect, not only a
new approach to handling international affairs but also to find a fresh
way of looking at the world.
In this respect his relationship with federalist organisations
is particularly interesting. He was impatient with their insistence on
the need to work through existing political structures to achieve world
federation and accused Federal Union of being "under the spell of
the nation-state". Under his plan, for example, all military forces
with the exception of small militias should be transferred immediately
to the world federation, yet he had no faith in the willingness of national
politicians to surrender such a sensitive aspect of sovereignty to the
global authority, nor in the parliamentary system which supported them
in office. Equally, he did not agree that a European federation could
lead to world government. It was more likely, he felt, to result in wars
between regional blocs.
His distrust of parliaments led him to new concepts
such as the use of specialised international agencies to take over many
of the functions of modern administration, using as a model the work of
the International Postal Union which operates both efficiently and independently
of national governments. Several other similar inter-national, functional
agencies have already come into existence. While not wishing to abolish
elections, he felt there was a need for citizen-juries to monitor politicians'
decisions and agency functions at both national and world levels, and
hold them to account in a way which is not possible through normal electoral
mechanisms.
H G Wells died in 1946, never knowing how far some of
his ideas have been put into practice. Had he lived he would have been
very impatient with the course events have taken. In a far-sighted comment
written before the development of air travel, electronic communications
and satellites, he stated that "the increasing facilities of communication,
the abolition of distance, render the federal association of the free
communities more and more imperative." Both in his fiction and non-fiction
he was essentially a visionary, intolerant of delays and difficulties.
Some of his proposals are impractical; others contain hidden threats to
personal liberty. Yet, as the author of Building Cosmopolis points
out, he was also a fierce defender of human rights. It was this conviction
which inspired his proposals for political change, even though his preferred
societal structures reveal a greater faith in mankind's ethical progress
than events can often justify.
John Parry is Honorary Member
of the Bureau of the Union of European Federalists and a member of the
Executive Committee of Federal Union. He can be contacted via john.p2@rdplus.net.
The views expressed in this article are those of the author and not necessarily
those of Federal Union.
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