Skip to content

Thesis defence

The Other Internationalists

The German Quest for a League of Nations After Imperial Collapse

Add to calendar 2025-11-07 10:00 2025-11-07 12:00 Europe/Rome The Other Internationalists Sala del Torrino Villa Salviati - Castle YYYY-MM-DD
Print

Scheduled dates

Nov 07 2025

10:00 - 12:00 CET

Sala del Torrino, Villa Salviati - Castle

Organised by

PhD thesis defence by Sandra Ricker

After the Great War, Germany was an international ‘outlaw’ state, a revisionist disruptor, and a fragile ‘democracy without democrats’ reeling from imperial collapse. Questioning this common portrayal, this thesis argues that there was another Weimar Republic. Taking the German Union for a League of Nations (Deutsche Liga für Völkerbund) as an entry point, it reconstructs a contemporary German perspective that sought to transform Germany from its transgressive militarist imperial past into an avant-garde state of the ‘new international order’ inaugurated in 1919.

An enclave of jurists, diplomats, politicians, civil servants, academics, intellectuals, feminists, social reformers, trade unionists, financiers, and businessmen with a broadly internationalist disposition attached to the German Foreign Office (Auswärtiges Amt), the Union was soon swept up in the heady political developments of the ‘German Revolution’, weaving together constitutional and international law in the hope of allowing Germany to emerge from the turmoil as a stable republic with a constitutive role in the making of the League of Nations and the new ground rules of international relations. Then came Versailles. Disillusioned but undeterred, German supporters of international organisation—some Social Democratic, some liberal, some pacifist, some feminist, and a few conservative—developed a legalist critique of the peace settlement, contesting its elaboration on its own terms amid a wider German turn towards international law. This thesis charts their various interventions, interventions that, at least initially, sought to lay the groundwork for a radical new departure in German foreign policymaking, complicated at every turn by the difficult politics of the Weimar Republic. It reveals a doubled preoccupation with sovereignty as the leitmotif tying together their various efforts—the ‘compromised’, unequal sovereignty of Germany as a problem, but also an anticipation of its deeper change in an internationalist age.

Please register to get a seat or to receive the ZOOM link.

Go back to top of the page