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QUINCY WRIGHT: AUTHOR
OF A STUDY OF WAR
1890-1970
by Karl
Deutsch, Harvard University
Man's history has long been
a story of struggle against suffering and death. This struggle
began when hunger and illness were no longer accepted as
irresistible and foreordained by fatewhen men began
to act against them. Today millions of men and women in
medical work and medical research carry on this struggle
against death. But today war is a greater threat to human
life than famine or disease. And in the entire world only
a few hundred or thousand men and women are engaged in serious
professional research on what causes war and on how war
could be abolished.
Nothing less than thisthe
understanding of war and the possible ways to its abolitionis
on the agenda of our time.
War, to be abolished, must
be understood. To be understood, it must be studied. No
one man worked with more sustained care, compassion, and
level-headedness on the study of war, its causes, and its
possible prevention than Quincy Wright. He did so for nearly
half a century, not only as a defender of man's survival,
but as a scientist. He valued accuracy, facts, and truth
more than any more appealing or preferred conclusions; and
in his great book, A Study of War, he gathered, together
with his collaborators, a larger body of relevant facts,
insights, and far-ranging questions about war than anyone
else has done.
Quincy Wright did more than
pile up information about war. He developed a basic theory
of war. Summarized and in drastically oversimplified form,
it might be called in effect a four-factor model of the
origins of war. Put most simply, his four factors are (1)
technology, particularly as it applies to military matters;
(2) law, particularly as it pertains to war and its initiation;
(3) social organization, particularly in regard to such
general purpose political units as tribes, nations, empires,
and international organizations; and (4) the distribution
of opinions and attitudes concerning basic values. These
four factors correspond to the technological, legal, sociopolitical,
and biological-psychological-cultural levels of human life,
respectively. At each level, conflict is likely, and violent
conflict becomes probable whenever there is an overloading
or breakdown of the mechanisms of arrangements that have
controlled the interplay of actions and actors at any level
and that previously have preserved some nonviolent balance
or equilibrium.
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| Quincy
and Louise Wright in New Delhi, c. 1958 |
Violence and war, according
to Quincy Wright, are probable and natural whenever adequate
adjustments or controls on one or more of these levels are
lacking. Peace, as he saw it, is "an equilibrium among many
forces." It is unlikely to come about by itself. It must
be organized in order to bring it about, to maintain it
thereafter, and to restore it after it has broken down.
Whenever there is a major
change at any levelculture and values, political and
social institutions, laws, or technologythe old adjustment
and control mechanisms become strained and may break down.
Any major psychological and cultural, or major social and
political, or legal, or technological change in the world
thus increases the risk of war, unless it is balanced by
compensatory political, legal, cultural, and psychological
adjustments. Peace thus requires ever new efforts, new arrangements,
and often new institutions to preserve the peace or to restore
it after its partial or worldwide breakdown.
The decades since 1942, the
first appearance of A Study of War, have seen unparalleled
changes sweep the world. These have been changes at all
levelsin demography, in technology, in law, in cultures
and values, and in social systems and in politicsand,
consequently, the basic risk of war is now greater than
ever. It follows that we must increase our efforts to create
international organizations and practices capable of reducing
this mounting risk of war to very low proportions.
Wright's conception of these
factors was such that the changes in each are conceived
of as, in principle. measurable. Technological change can
be measured by statistical data about the explosive power
of bombs, about the speed and range of delivery systems,
and about the total energy supply of the national economies
behind each military establishment. Changes in attitudes
and values held by the masses of the populations, and in
the possibly different values held by the elites of political
decision-makers, may be measured by means of public opinion
data and by the content analysis of major newspapers or
by policy statements. Changes in the number and size of
states of various types and in the number, scope, and observance
of international laws, treaties, and organizations could
all, in principle, likewise be noted. From such data, inferences
could be drawn to estimate the speed and scope of processes
increasing or decreasing the likelihood of uncontrolled
large-scale conflicts and hence the size and power of the
forces making for war or peace. These forces are seen as
working behind and beneath the health or illness and the
wisdom or folly of individual statesmen, leaders, or commanders.
The decisions of such individuals still count for much in
Quincy Wright's view of the world, but they must governeither
against or withthe current of large events made up
of the changes of large systems and the changing values
and actions of hundreds of millions of people. In the present
age of dangerous transition, the problems before statesmen
and peoples are in some ways similar to the difficult adjustments
that European peoples had to make in the great transitions
of the fifth and the fifteenth centuries, each of which,
as Wright reminded us, was made successfully.
As a pragmatically oriented
thinker, Quincy Wright sought more to be empirically comprehensive
than to be mathematically elegant. At this stage of social
science, his broad factors are not completely operational.
They represent large categories and aspects of society and
politics. Once we try to specify quantitative variables
within each of these broad factors, their number soon becomes
large and their analysis difficult. Much work is to be done
here, but it will be aided and illuminated by Wright's grand
conception. Details of this conception, applied to the historic
past, as well as to the present and future, fill hundreds
of pages of A Study of War. They still furnish suggestions
for research for years to come. Indeed, seeing the world
in this manner, Quincy Wright necessarily became one of
the chief pioneers of modern peace research. In due time,
more explicit, detailed, and sophisticated models will doubtlessly
follow upon his pathbreaking effort, but they will bear
a debt to the work he did.
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| Quincy Wright,
left, and his brother Sewall with a portrait of their
father, Phillip Green Wright. |
But this book offers more
than a fundamental education. It was and is a pathfinder
in matters of substance; and its substantive concerns have
been carried forward since the time of its first appearance
in 1942. Quincy Wright himself did this by editing a volume
on The World Community in 1948 and by writing his
important text on The Study of International Relations
in 1955, which marked a significant advance in the use of
quantitative data in a larger framework of analysis (Wright,
1948, 1955). His work on the study of conflict has been
the pioneer for such later work as the continuing research
by many scholars.
His chapter in A Study
of War on the balance of power showed the way in which
a balance-of-power system may gradually turn into an international
or supranational community.
Until now, to the best of
my knowledge, the Nobel Peace Prize has never been given
to a social scientist. In contrast to the policy of other
Nobel Prize committees, in other fields, the Norwegian Parliament
has awarded mankind's highest honor for contributions to
peace only to men of political action or to other persons
engaged in popular persuasion.
Recipients of the prize thus
have usually been statesmen of national governments or international
organizations or else writers, educators, or natural scientists
trying to influence popular attitudes. In regard to the
social sciences, the pursuit of more knowledge about peace
thus far has gone unnoticed and unhonored at the highest
level. On the day on which this changes, on the day when
the crucial role of knowledge and of social science in the
search for peace will be more fully appreciated than it
has been in the pastmankind may well remember the
pioneering contributions of Quincy Wright's A Study of
War.
from
The
Journal of Conflict Resolution (Volume XIV, Number 4,
1970)
The
following letter, published in the same journal as the above
article by Deutsch, urged that Quincy Wright be considered
for a Nobel Peace Prize:
Dr. August Schou
General Secretary
Nobel Peace Prize Committee
Norwegian Nobel Institute
I am writing you as the chairman
of the committee now being formed in order to nominate Professor
Quincy Wright for the Nobel Prize for Peace in 1970. During
the last 30 years, Professor Quincy Wright has done more
than any other scholar to promote the cause of peace by
means of fundamental research in political science, international
law, and the social sciences. More than any other living
scholar, he may be considered the founder of systematic
research for peace. The Peace Research Institutes now developing
in many countries represent later stages in a trend to the
start of which Wright made a decisive contribution.
Quincy Wright's most important
scholarly contribution is his monumental work, A Study
of War, first published in 1942, and re-published (revised
and with a new chapter) in 1965 by The University of Chicago
Press. This book represents the most serious and sustained
research effort undertaken thus far, to bring together the
knowledge of social scientists, historians, and students
of politics on the causes of war, and on possible ways to
abolish war as a social institution.
In his field of political
science. Quincy Wright has been a leader of international
stature. For many years Professor at the University of Chicago,
he was President of the American Association of University
Professors, 1944-46, of the American Political Science Association,
1949-50; of the International Political Science Association,
1950-51: and of the American Society of International Law,
1955-56.
Throughout his life, Quincy
Wright has taken the side of peace in the political decisions
of his time, even where this implied disagreement with the
current foreign policies of his country. In the 1920's he
opposed the prevailing American policies of political isolation
and favored United States membership in the League of Nations.
In the 1930's he opposed Nazi and Japanese aggression, supported
the Spanish Republic, and favored United States collaboration
for collective security against fascism. Unlike some of
his colleagues, Quincy Wright was an antifacist before it
became fashionable to be one. During and after World War
II, he supported the United Nations, and opposed the growing
rigidity of the foreign policies of the United States and
the Soviet Union during the years of the "cold war." He
was from the outset an active opponent of the United States
war in Vietnam, challenging its supposed legal basis as
well as its asserted morality, justice, or political rationality.
On all these issues, whether his views prevailed or not,
his public stand and personal commitment have earned weight
with many. Like Ralph Bunche and Martin Luther King, Quincy
Wright has helped to change the mood of his epoch and country.
It was Quincy Wright's quiet work, together with that of
many other scholars, which helped prepare the intellectual
and moral climate in which opposition to the war in Vietnamand
to any war like itis gradually becoming the majority
view of the American people.
Our nomination
of Quincy Wright also raises a question of principle. To be
abolished, war, like cancer, must be understood in its causes.
Thus far, Nobel Prizes for Peace have been given to statesmen
and to public figures, appealing to public opinion in ways
promoting peace, often in connection with specific political
issues. It is good and right that such efforts were honored
by your prize. But should not the cognitive sidethe
creation of knowledge relevant to the fostering of peacealso
be honored from time to time by your Peace Prize?
In combating illness, the
Nobel Prize for Medicine rewards the creation of new knowledge
and the making of new discoveries, far above any concern
for their application. The promoting of peace, the will
and skill to apply whatever useful knowledge we have is
certainly important, but is the discovery and creation of
such relevant knowledge not equally important?
Your committee
could exercise leadership and give a positive answer to these
questions by awarding the Nobel Prize for Peace to Quincy
Wright, who has contributed both to the knowledge for peace
and to the willingness of many students and readers to act
on this knowledge.
In so doing, you would honor
not only an outstanding individual but all those who are
trying to serve peace through working in the social sciences.
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Karl W.
Deutsch, President
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American Political Science
Association
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Kenneth
Boulding, University of Colorado; President, International
Peace Research Association
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Karl
W. Deutsch. Harvard University; President, American
Political Science Association
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Carl
J. Friedrich, Harvard University; President, International
Political Science Association
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Ernst
B. Haas, University of California, Berkeley
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Walter
Isard, University of Pennsylvania; Executive Secretary,
Peace Research Society (International)
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Majid
Khadduri, Johns Hopkins University
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Daniel
Katz, University of Michigan
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Robert
E. Lane, Yale University; President-elect. American
Political Science Association
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Harold
D. Lasswell, Yale Law School; President, American Political
Science Association, 1955-56
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Albert
Lepawski, University of California, Berkeley
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Anatol
Rapoport, Technical University, Lingby, Denmark; and
University of Michigan
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Bert
E. A. Roling, Polemologisch Institut, Netherlands; Secretary-General,
International Peace Research Association
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J. David
Singer, University of Michigan; Chairman, Nominating
Committee, American Political Science Association
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Kenneth
W. Thompson, Vice-president, The Rockefeller Foundation
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Oscar Schachter, Director,
UNITAR; President, American Society of International
Law
The
nomination failed. Nevertheless, the contribution
of Quincy Wright lives on as a deathless expression
of his invigorating Unitarian faith in Life.
A
Study of War by Quincy Wright, Second Edition (Chicago:
The University of Chicago Press, 1965).
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