Domestic Role Contestation, Foreign Policy, and International Relations

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Belgian Development Cooperation
belief systems analysis
Category=JP
Category=JPA
Category=JPS
comparative case studies
Cristian Cantir
Decision Making
domestic political role contestation research
Domestic Politics
Domestic Role Contestation
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Foreign Minister
Foreign Policy Analysis
Foreign Policy Behavior
Geopolitical Pressures
Horizontal Contestation
Independent Scotland
international policy change
International Politics
International Relations
Japanese Security Policy
Juliet Kaarbo
LDP.
Libyan Crisis
multi-level governance
national identity politics
National Role Conceptions
NATO Command
Partisan Ambition
policy actor dynamics
Political Psychology
Political Sociology
Role Conception
Role Contestation
Role Entrepreneurs
Role Location Process
Role Theory
Scottish Independence Debate
SNP
State Behavior
State Secretary
Stephen G. Walker
Strategic Orientation
Turkish Foreign Policy
UK Foreign Policy
UK Role

Product details

  • ISBN 9781138653801
  • Weight: 610g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 11 May 2016
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Despite the increase in the number of studies in international relations using concepts from a role theory perspective, scholarship continues to assume that a state’s own expectations of what role it should play on the world stage is shared among domestic political actors.

Cristian Cantir and Juliet Kaarbo have gathered a leading team of internationally distinguished international relations scholars to draw on decades of research in foreign policy analysis to explore points of internal contestation of national role conceptions (NRCs) and the effects and outcomes of contestation between domestic political actors. Nine detailed comparative case studies have been selected for the purpose of theoretical exploration, with an eye to illustrating the relevance of role contestation in a diversity of settings, including variation in period, geographic area, unit of analysis, and aspects of the domestic political process.

This edited book includes a number of pioneering insights into how the domestic political process can have a crucial effect on how a country behaves at the global level.

Cristian Cantir is an assistant professor of political science at Oakland University in Michigan, USA. Some of his research interests include the domestic determinants of foreign policy behavior, the diplomatic activities of substate governments, role theory, and historical approaches to IR.

Juliet Kaarbo is a professor of international relations with a chair in foreign policy at the University of Edinburgh, UK. She is codirector of Edinburgh’s Centre for Security Research. Her research focuses on political psychology, leadership and decision making, group dynamics, foreign policy analysis and theory, parliamentary political systems, and national roles.