<p>Reconciling the imperatives of Germanyâs national identity and its national interest has been a challenge for the countryâs policymakers since the end of the Cold War. Anika Leithner explores how (and how much) the past continues to shape Germanyâs foreign policy behavior in the first decade of t
Historical Memory and Foreign Policy
â Scribed by Lina Klymenko (editor), Marco Siddi (editor)
- Publisher
- Palgrave Macmillan
- Year
- 2022
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 142
- Edition
- 1st ed. 2022
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
⌠Synopsis
This book explores the uses of the past in foreign policy-making. It outlines why and how political leaders refer to historical events in contemporary foreign policy discourses; the goals they hope to achieve; and the sometimes unintended foreign policy consequences of their (ab)use of historical memory. Furthermore, it looks at how political leaders shape domestic collective memories in pursuit of their international agendas, and highlight historical events leaders forget, reinterpret or obscure through selective narratives.
The chapters explore a variety of theoretical concepts that shed light on how memory and foreign policy are linked in a complex and reciprocal way. The following mechanisms are discussed: the application of historical analogies; the construction of historical narratives; the creation of memory sites; the marginalisation and forgetting of the past; and the securitisation of historical memory. Through the use of a number of methodological approaches (such as discourse analysis, narrative analysis and content analysis of securitising moves) and a broad range of qualitative and quantitative data (newspaper articles, policy documents, commemorative speeches, interviews with policymakers and the observation of memory sites), the contributions highlight the interdependence of the international, national, regional and local dimensions of memory practices and history writing. Although they mostly focus on national case studies of foreign policy-making, they also reveal how representations of historical events evolve through interaction between political actors at the international level of analysis.
The collection originated in the section entitled âExploring the Link between Historical Memory and Foreign Policyâ at the annual Pan-European Conference of the European International Studies Association (EISA) 2018 held in Prague, the Czech Republic.
⌠Table of Contents
Contents
Exploring the link between historical memory and foreign policy: an introduction
Abstract
Defining collective memory and history
Establishing the nexus between historical memory and foreign policy
The application of historical analogies
The construction of (populist) historical narratives
The creation of memory sites
The marginalisation and forgetting of the past
The securitisation of historical memory
Acknowledgements
References
âRemember Iraq!â Learning theory and the 2013 non-decision on air strikes against Syria
Abstract
Foreign policy learning theory
A survey of events
Polish reluctance versus Danish readiness
The House of Commons surprise
Denmark stays on track
Obama hesitates and involves Congress
âRemember Iraq!â means different things
Does the theory âwinâ on its own home ground?
Historical lessons: some further reflections
Conclusions
Was Syria policy improved by Iraq?
References
The role of historical narratives in Ukraineâs policy toward the EU and Russia
Abstract
Introduction
Narrating stories as a cognitive structuring of peopleâs experiences
Making use of historical narratives in Ukrainian foreign policy discourse
The Kyivan Rus
The Cossack Hetmanate
The Soviet Union
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References
Populism, historical discourse and foreign policy: the case of Polandâs Law and Justice government
Abstract
Introduction
Populism, history and foreign policy: a conceptual framework
Populism and historical discourse
Historical discourse and foreign policy
Against âpedagogics of shameâ: the populist logic of PiSâ historical discourse
Implications for foreign policy practice: relations with Germany and Ukraine
Germany
Ukraine
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References
Foreign policy and physical sites of memory: competing foreign policies at the Jasenovac memorial site
Abstract
Political memory and foreign policy
Physical sites of memory and foreign policymaking
Jasenovac as site of foreign policy construction
Jasenovac in Croatiaâs foreign policy
Jasenovac in Serbian foreign policy
Jasenovac in the foreign policy of Republika Srpska
Conclusion
Acknowledgments
References
Silencing history: forgetting Italyâs past during the refugee crisis in Europe
Abstract
Introduction
The politics of forgetting the past
Collective memory and forgetting
Italyâs colonial past and the politics of forgetting
The myth of the âgood Italianâ
Italian postcolonialism and migrations
Recent migration to Italy and the rise of anti-migrant discourses
Forgetting the past and Italian official discourses on migration
Conclusion
Acknowledgements
References
Understanding the persistence of history-related issues in SinoâJapanese relations: from memory to forgetting
Abstract
Introduction
Collective memory in international relations
From memory to three kinds of forgetting
Memory as fading away and denial
Forgetting as inherent to remembering
Forgetting and SinoâJapanese relations
Forgetting as fading away
Forgetting as denial
Forgetting as inherent to memory
Conclusion
References
Historical memory and securitisation of the Russian intervention in Syria
Abstract
Introduction
Copenhagen school of securitisation: defining the grammar of security
Historical memory and the construction of (in)security
Methodology
Dynamics and agents of (de)securitising moves
Securitisation and de-securitisation by pro-government actors
USA and ISIL against Russiaâsecuritising the intervention
No new Cold Warâde-securitising the intervention, securitising the Russia-West crisis
De-securitisation and counter-securitisation by oppositional actors
Syria is not a threatâde-securitisation of the intervention
Putin in Syria is a threatâcounter-securitisation of the intervention
Conclusion: historical memory and securitisation in Syria
References
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