This book aims to explain how foreign policy can adapt to the challenge of globalization. Two central questions are posed to structure the argument: how can foreign policy defend or project statist political communities using soft power within a global information space, and does soft power, when exercised in turn by non-state actors, affect foreign policy by undermining statist community within the same global information space?
Author(s): Alan Chong
Edition: First Edition
Year: 2007
Language: English
Pages: 256
Cover......Page 1
Contents......Page 6
List of Illustrations......Page 8
Acknowledgments......Page 10
List of Abbreviations......Page 12
Introduction: Nation-State Foreign Policy amidst Globalization......Page 16
One: Toward a Changing Environment for Foreign Policy: Nation-State, Globalization, and Information as Political Power......Page 21
Two: Global Information Space, Discursive Community, and Soft Power......Page 37
Three: Soft Power in Foreign Policy......Page 74
Four: Leadership in Foreign Policy, From Inside-Out and Outside-In: Singaporean Foreign Policy and the Asian Values Debate, 1992–2000......Page 97
Five: The Intermestic Politics of Foreign Policy: Chilean Foreign Policy and the Pinochet Extradition Controversy, 1998–2000......Page 156
Conclusion: Soft Power Foreign Policy—Creation Spinning Re-Creation......Page 207
Notes......Page 214
Bibliography......Page 222
A......Page 251
F......Page 252
K......Page 253
R......Page 254
Z......Page 255