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Post-Structuralism, Discourse Analysis and Foreign Policy. January 21, 2013. Overview. Post-structuralism Discourse analysis in foreign policy. Post-structuralism. Reflective theory Focus on the use of language
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Post-Structuralism, Discourse Analysis and Foreign Policy January 21, 2013
Overview Post-structuralism Discourse analysis in foreign policy
Post-structuralism • Reflective theory • Focus on the use of language • Less concerned about the “truth” of a statement than the values and interests reflected and supported in a the statement
An example of use of language: Maritimers are friendly
Post-structuralism • Language as power • Strong empirical focus • Builds a lot from realism, but also critical of its positivist stance and efforts to universalize
Post-structuralism & realism • Draws on but also challenges aspects of the three core assumptions of realism: • Groupism • Egoism • Power-centrism
Post-structuralism - Groupism State stands at the core of modern political life, but argue need to understand this in historical context Inside-outside distinction: Social contract is present inside the state, unlike between states So tendency to see domestic politics as distinct from international politics
Groupism • However, this assumption is only there because it is sustained through practices. • Historically, there are different forms of foreign policy, thus realism’s groupism assumption must be historicized. • Domestic and international are defined as the radical opposite of each other. • This distinction puts difference outside the state - what is out there is different from what it is inside the state
Egoism • Politics an foreign policy are driven by interests but those interests are “discursive”. • Don’t come with our interests already established, they are developed and articulated through our interactions and language • Dichotomies like self-interest/altruism & rational/irrational are used in ways to structure our ability to think about foreign policy as the inside-outside distinction does.
Dichotomies are dependent on each other helping define one against the other, and often one as superior to the other • Rational - irrational • Foreign - domestic • Us -them
Identity as constituted through foreign policy • So foreign policy tells about how we see ourselves in relation to others • Leads to the idea of ‘otherness’ and how it is created in relation to ‘our’ identity.
Implications of difference • Why would seeing another group as different, or “the other” matter to foreign policy? • How might seeing that difference impact our policy decisions or our interpretations of their actions?
Power – from capability to discourse Language as power because it is through discourse that subjects, objects, actors and identities are being constituted Power to marginalize the discourse of others How might language be used marginalize the discourse of others? Power
Language as key to legitimizing foreign policy • Helps make foreign policy appear necessary and realistic to relevant audience
The politics of representation: The language of foreign policy helps generate meaning of the ‘problem’ that policies are aimed at solving (e.g. head of state, countries, wars, populations). Discourse analysis asks not whether a representation is true or false, but what the political implications of adopting a particular representation are.
The case of Saddam Hussein • “We are now acting because the risks of inaction would be far greater. In one year, or five years, the power of Iraq to inflict harm on all free nations would be multiplied many times over. With these capabilities, Saddam Hussein and his terrorist allies could choose the moment of deadly conflict when they are strongest. We choose to meet that threat now, where it arises, before it can appear suddenly in our skies and cities.” - George W. Bush
“If Saddam Hussein attempts to cling to power, he will remain a deadly foe until the end. In desperation, he and terrorists groups might try to conduct terrorist operations against the American people and our friends. These attacks are not inevitable. They are, however, possible. And this very fact underscores the reason we cannot live under the threat of blackmail. The terrorist threat to America and the world will be diminished the moment that Saddam Hussein is disarmed.” - George W. Bush
The scope and stability of foreign policy: • Beside official foreign policies, discourse analysts study political parties not in government, the media, NGO’s and others who engage in foreign policy debates. • This way one gets an understanding of the positions that official foreign policy has to fight off or accommodate.
Canada and Afghanistan • “However, what we face is the Taliban still working to generate doubt and fear. They would like nothing better than Canada and other NATO countries to withdraw from Afghanistan. They know that the Canadian court of public opinion had tremendous influence. They are aware of our domestic discussion on this issue and they will try to exploit our debate for military gain. They can’t beat us on the battlefield. That is the only way this cunning adversary can win.” - Peter MacKay, 2007
The question of how stable a foreign policy discourse is can also be approached by looking more critically, or deconstructively, at the stability of official texts. Stability as the “fit” between the policy advocated and its representation Instability can create flexibility to adjust policies in the future Textual instability – the case of NATO and Operation Unified Protector
Change and genealogy • What we consider foreign policy changes over time, and the policy on a given issue often shifts from appearance on the agenda of decision makers • Through pressure at the level of the discourse itself - e.g. the war is too costly • Through changes in the foreign policy ‘issue’ itself- e.g. collapse of USSR
A genealogy starts from the present and asks how what we ‘know’ now has become ‘the’ understanding of history, and what has been excluded or marginalized by current representations.
One more example • “Canadians understand that development and security go hand in hand. Without security, there can be no humanitarian aid, no reconstruction and democratic development. Progress will be slow, but our efforts are bearing fruit…Like the North Star, Canada has been a guide to other nations; through difficult times, Canada has shone as an example of what people joined in a common purpose can achieve.”- Stephen Harper, 2007
Conclusion • Power of language • Focus on analyzing foreign policies and their contexts in detail • Less concerned about the “truth” of statements or representation and more interested in the interests and values in those representation and the implications from them.