@article{oai:nagoya.repo.nii.ac.jp:00007153, author = {尾崎, 邦博 and OZAKI, Kunihiro}, issue = {2}, journal = {経済科学}, month = {Sep}, note = {John Atkinson Hobson is known as an acute critic of imperialism. In this paper Hobson’s ideal of international government is explored. Profoundly influenced by the Hague Peace Conference, he came to regard arbitration as a useful method for peaceful settlement of international disputes and hoped that the moral and intellectual progress of internationalism would enable an international fabric more powerful than the Hague court to be established. During the Great War, his ideal of international government ripened into the scheme of a League of Nations. This League was to be composed of the international judicial bodies, which performed the functions of arbitration, inquiry and conciliation, and the representative international council, which had the judicial, executive, and legislative powers for the prevention and settlement of international disputes. But the establishment of the League of Nations in 1920 greatly disappointed him, because the League seemed to be the new Holy Alliance of the Allied powers. Revealing the structural defects of the League, he insisted that the harmonious development of democracy and internationalism should be required for the reformation of the League.}, pages = {51--68}, title = {J.A.ホブスンにおける国際政府構想の展開}, volume = {55}, year = {2007} }