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New Realities in Foreign Affairs

Diplomacy in the 21st Century
Herausgeber:innen:
Verlag:
 2019

Zusammenfassung

Moderne Diplomatie wirkt heute in viele Bereiche des modernen Lebens hinein. Sie ist zugleich selbst neuen Einflüssen ausgesetzt. Faktoren, die unsere Gesellschaften verändern, verändern auch unser Regierungshandeln, auch in der Außenpolitik, seien es Digitalisierung, emotionalisierte Sensibilitäten unserer Öffentlichkeiten oder nicht-staatliche internationale Akteure. Derartige Entwicklungen müssen von der Diplomatie aufgenommen werden, damit sie weiter als Instrument einer Regierung funktionieren kann. Regierungen sollten Wege finden, zwischen den neuen Bedürfnissen der Gesellschaft und den Notwendigkeiten legitimen Regierungshandelns zu vermitteln. Das Ziel sollte sein, als souveräner Staat handeln zu können und zugleich das Potential der tiefgreifenden gesellschaftlichen Veränderungen zu nutzen. Mit Beiträgen von Volker Stanzel, Sascha Lohmann, Andrew Cooper, Christer Jönsson, Corneliu Bjola, Emillie V. de Keulenaar, Jan Melissen, Karsten D. Voigt, Kim B. Olsen, Hanns W. Maull und R. S. Zaharna

Schlagworte


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Bibliographische Angaben

Auflage
1/2019
Copyrightjahr
2019
ISBN-Print
978-3-8487-5776-3
ISBN-Online
978-3-8452-9950-1
Verlag
Nomos, Baden-Baden
Reihe
Andrássy Studien zur Europaforschung
Band
23
Sprache
Englisch
Seiten
127
Produkttyp
Sammelband

Inhaltsverzeichnis

KapitelSeiten
  1. Titelei/Inhaltsverzeichnis Kein Zugriff Seiten 1 - 8
  2. Issues and Recommendations Kein Zugriff Seiten 9 - 12
  3. Autor:innen:
    1. 1. The Personal Element Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    2. 2. Instrumental Level: Digitization Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    3. 3. Institutional Aspects Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    4. 4. Global Aspects Kein Zugriff
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  4. Autor:innen:
    1. Progressing Practice Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    2. Trailing Theory Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    3. Bridging the Gap Kein Zugriff
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  5. Populism and the Domestic Challenge to Diplomacy Kein Zugriff Seiten 33 - 38
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  6. Autor:innen:
    1. Autor:innen:
      1. From Immunity to Vulnerability Kein Zugriff
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      2. Mirroring Society Kein Zugriff
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      3. Democratic vs. Authoritarian States as Principals Kein Zugriff
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      4. Representing Divided Societies Kein Zugriff
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      5. Representing Populist Regimes Kein Zugriff
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    2. Autor:innen:
      1. Supranational Representation Kein Zugriff
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      2. Subnational Representation Kein Zugriff
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      3. Transnational representation Kein Zugriff
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    3. Conclusion Kein Zugriff
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  7. Autor:innen:
    1. Context: From Institutional-based to Ecosystem Approaches Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    2. Process: From Re-action to Pro-action Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    3. Structure: From Centralisation to ‘Network of Networks’ Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    4. Post-truth: From Fact-based Reasoning to Emotional Commodification Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    5. Automation: From Relationship-building to Robo-trolling Kein Zugriff
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    6. Strategic Entropy: From Digital Outputs to Policy Outcomes Kein Zugriff
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  8. Autor:innen:
    1. Technology and Diplomatic Practice Kein Zugriff
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    2. Digital Literacy and Awareness in Diplomacy Kein Zugriff
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    3. The Softwarization of Diplomatic Practice Kein Zugriff
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    4. More than a Search for Attention Online Kein Zugriff
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    5. Five Policy Recommendations Kein Zugriff
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  9. Autor:innen:
    1. 1. New Forms of Communication Kein Zugriff
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    2. 2. New Competencies at the Top Operational Level Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    3. 3. Interministerial Exchange in the European Union Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    4. 4. The Impact of European ‘Party Families’ Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    5. 5. The ‘Nebenaußenpolitik’ (Parallel Foreign Policy) of Parties Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    6. 6. The Influence of National Parliaments Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
  10. Autor:innen:
    1. From Sanctions to Free Trade Agreements: Geoeconomics on the Rise in EU Foreign Policy Making Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    2. The Neglected Foreign Policy Role of Non-Governmental Agency in Europe’s Liberal Market Economies Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    3. The Fallacies of Structuralism for Understanding Geoeconomic Diplomacy Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    4. Shifting Perspective: From ‘Diplomatic Systems’ to ‘Diplomatic Networks’ Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    5. Making European Sanctions Work? The Role of German Domestic Networks in the EU’s Sanction Regime against Russia Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    6. Concluding remarks Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
  11. Autor:innen:
    1. What Diplomacy Needs to Deliver: Changing Demands on Governance beyond the State Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    2. What Diplomacy Can Deliver: The Constraints of Sovereignty Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    3. The Concept of Foreign Policy Autism Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    4. FPA and the European Union Kein Zugriff
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    5. Future Implications Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
  12. Autor:innen:
    1. State-Centric Digital Diplomacy: Digital Media as Diplomatic Tools Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    2. Mixed Results Kein Zugriff
      Autor:innen:
    3. Autor:innen:
      1. Emotion as a Defining Dynamic Kein Zugriff
        Autor:innen:
      2. Personalized Do-it Yourself Politics Kein Zugriff
        Autor:innen:
      3. Story-Driven Resonant Narratives Kein Zugriff
        Autor:innen:
      4. Emotion and Identity Kein Zugriff
        Autor:innen:
      5. Emotion and Community Kein Zugriff
        Autor:innen:
    4. Autor:innen:
      1. Avoiding the State-Centric Strategic Communication Treadmill Kein Zugriff
        Autor:innen:
      2. Developing an Eye for Public-Centric Needs Kein Zugriff
        Autor:innen:
      3. Leveraging the Human Dimension Kein Zugriff
        Autor:innen:
  13. Conclusions – An Open Diplomacy Kein Zugriff Seiten 115 - 120
  14. Selected Bibliography Kein Zugriff Seiten 121 - 124
  15. About the Authors Kein Zugriff Seiten 125 - 127

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