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235 Annals Am. Acad. Pol. & Soc. Sci. v (1944)

handle is hein.cow/anamacp0235 and id is 1 raw text is: FOREWORD

CUSTOM does not sanction an editor's
Conclusion. Editors, it seems, must
always write Introductions. That is
unfortunate; for what is too often of-
fered in editorial forewords is a com-
pressed, predigested tablet of informa-
tion. There is no savor and little
nourishment in such decoctions. They
are merely convenient escapes for peo-
ple who, having little time and no in-
clination to read the whole volume, still
want to feel as though they have done
so, and want to give that impression to
others. Presumably that is why the
editor's comments are almost invariably
put first in the volume. Their location
there is an added convenience for the
hit-and-run reader.
Well, such people have my sympathy.
I, too, have gulped down gratefully
many such synthetic pills of informa-
tion. But this is one editor's foreword
deliberately designed to deny the reader
that kind of help. I dare anyone to
extract from this Introduction any co-
herent notion of the contents of the
excellent articles which make up this
volume. Instead, I propose in these
pages to try to irritate, entice, and brow-
beat the busiest and least interested sub-
scriber to THE ANNALS to read all of
this particular issue.
So, if any reader is afraid to risk get-
ting involved in a substantial enterprise
of study and reflection, he had better
drop the volume right this minute and
right at this point, as though it had
burst into flame in his hands.
There are two main reasons for pre-
paring a volume on education and inter-
national affairs at this moment.
First, there will not soon be another
time as propitious for planning and con-
ducting programs in this field. There
is a nasty cycle in this peace-and-war
business.  War necessarily   develops
strong national loyalties, exalts force
V

and violence, thrusts aside questions of
equity and reason. When war ends, the
revived nationalistic fervors which it has
released continue to coast along with a
slowly slackening momentum. By the
time a more balanced international out-
look can be restored, the seeds of the
next war have already been sown.
During times of war, people long
desperately for peace. They try hard
to think how peace had best be organ-
ized, how it can be maintained. Their
suffering drives them to consider almost
any remedy that may be proposed for
the conditions that hurt them. But
when the war ends, their relief is so
great and their previous labors have
been so exhausting that they can hardly
make themselves face any problem ex-
cept that of getting back to normal liv-
ing. That was so in 1920; it is likely
to be so again in 1950.
Our best chance to win and keep the
peace, then, is to face the problems of
peace during the war; for after the war
we shall probably be weary and mean
and forgetful.
A second good reason for this volume
is to be found in the neglect of educa-
tional and cultural relations by most of
the world's practical statesmen. The
problem of maintaining peace is one of
great complexity. It is in part a prob-
lem of economics, of political arrange-
ments, of legal systems. It is also, in
part, a problem of educational and cul-
tural relations. Much has been written
and done about the economic, political,
and legal aspects of international affairs.
By comparison, almost nothing has been
said or done about cultural and educa-
tional forces in the international field.
Most people will readily agree that
education plays an important part in
both international understandings and
conflicts. But between the intellectual
acceptance of a principle and a definite

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