South Korean Identity and Global Foreign Policy

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A01=Patrick Flamm
Asian Studies
Author_Patrick Flamm
Category=JPS
climate change policy
Climate Diplomacy
Constructivism
Contemporary Korea
Diplomacy
Domestic Politics
Domestic Role Contestation
East Asia Climate Partnership
East Asian politics
Energy Resource
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eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Eventual Unification
Foreign Policy
Foreign Policy Analysis
Global Foreign Policy
Global Green Growth Institute
Identity
IMF Crisis
International Climate Diplomacy
International Political Sociology
International Relations
international relations theory
International State Identity
Joseon Korea
Korea
Korea's International Standing
Korean Studies
Korea’s International Standing
middle power diplomacy
Modern Korean History
National Assembly Standing Committee
national role conceptions
Peacekeeping
Peacekeeping Deployments
peacekeeping operations
performative state identity research
President Park Geun Hye
Rising South Korea
Role Conception
Role Theory
Sit Approach
South Korean Diplomats
South Korean Foreign Policy
South Korean Identity
South Sudan
UNIFIL II
Western Sahara

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367192754
  • Weight: 385g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 16 May 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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In the 20th century, South Korea was usually seen as a "shrimp amongst whales", a minor player with limited agency in regional and global affairs. Korea’s risen status as a "middle power" today, however, begs the question about related changes in the South Korean identity or "sense of self" in the world.

In this book, Patrick Flamm presents the first comprehensive and agency oriented empirical account of South Korean international state identity and Seoul’s global foreign policy in the 21st century. Advancing a performative and narrative understanding of identity in International Relations, Flamm uses South Korea’s global engagement in peacekeeping and climate diplomacy to offer much-needed insight into the various identity narratives and role conceptions at play. In the case of peacekeeping and climate diplomacy, South Korea’s identity as an international actor has been dominated by practices of self-identification that position the country at the brink of advanced countries, aspiring to lead the rest of the world but with the overall objective to maintain national autonomy in a changing regional and global context.

South Korean Identity and Global Foreign Policy is a must-read for scholars of International Relations, Foreign Policy Analysis and Asian/Korean Studies.

Patrick Flamm is Lecturer in International Relations at the School of History,

Philosophy, Political Science and International Relations at Victoria University

of Wellington. His research interests are South Korea as a rising power in global

affairs, identity and foreign policy, as well as international environmental and

Antarctic politics. Patrick studied Political Science and International Relations

at Goethe-University Frankfurt, Germany, and Korea University, Republic of

Korea, and holds a PhD in Asian Studies from the University of Auckland.

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