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The Geoeconomic Diplomacy of European Sanctions: Networked Practices and Sanctions Implementation: Diplomatic Studies, cartea 19

Autor Kim B. Olsen
en Limba Engleză Hardback – 6 iul 2022
When policy-makers opt for sanctions or other economic power instruments in response to geostrategic challenges, the stage is set for geoeconomic diplomacy. Challenging traditional conceptions about the interplay between governments and markets, this book sheds a new light on the diplomatic actors and processes that shape successful geoeconomic foreign and security policy-making. Unpacking the ‘networked practices’ through which diplomats advanced the early implementation of the European Union’s far-reaching sanctions regimes against Russia and Syria, the book demonstrates how geoeconomic diplomats depend on their abilities to navigate in complex actor-networks in the interfaces between the public, private, and non-governmental realm.
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Specificații

ISBN-13: 9789004518810
ISBN-10: 9004518819
Dimensiuni: 155 x 235 mm
Greutate: 0.45 kg
Editura: Brill
Colecția Brill | Nijhoff
Seria Diplomatic Studies


Notă biografică

Kim B. Olsen, Ph.D. (2020, University of Antwerp) is a diplomatic practitioner and has published widely on geoeconomics and EU foreign and security policy. A former Senior Adviser to the Danish Ministry of Foreign Affairs, he is affiliated with the Danish Institute for International Studies and the German Council on Foreign Relations.

Cuprins

Preface

Acknowledgements

Abbreviations

Introduction The eu in the Age of Geoeconomic Multipolarisation
1 The Puzzle: Instrumentalising Economic Power in Europe’s Liberal Market Capitalism

2 The Approach: Practices and Actor-Networks of Geoeconomic Diplomacy

3 The Limitations: Neglecting the Outcomes of Geoeconomic Interventions

4 Outline of Chapters


1Economic Power, Geoeconomics, and Sanctions
1 The Realist-Liberalist Divide: Classical Conceptions of Economic Power in ir
1.1Realist Recognitions: Non-state Actors’ Influence on Economic Means of Power

1.2Realist Remainders: The Legacy of Geopolitics as an Analytical Category


2 Geoeconomics: A Renewed Debate on Economic Power in the 21st Century’s Multipolar Order
2.1Geoeconomics as Global Governance: Managing International Interdependencies

2.2Geoeconomics as National Policies: Instrumentalising Wealth in Foreign and Security Policy


3 Economic Sanctions: A Popular, Yet Challenging, Geoeconomic Instrument
3.1Conventional Analytical Approaches to the Study of Sanctions

3.2The Complex Institutional Framework of eu Sanctions Implementation


2Geoeconomic Diplomacy Enhancing Abilities to Instrumentalise Economic Means of Power
1 Geoeconomic Disparities in the ‘Multipolar’ 21st Century
1.1The (Overestimated) Structural Advantages of State Capitalism

1.2The (Underestimated) Structural Disadvantages of Liberal Market Capitalism


2 Exploring the Paradox: Limited Governmental Control over Geoeconomic Levers

3 Geoeconomic Diplomacy: Leveraging Economic Power through Diplomatic Relationship Building


3Sanctioning Russia The Domestic Drivers Behind the Geoeconomic Diplomacy of France and Germany
1 Case i: eu Sanctions on Russia – an Inductive Search for Geoeconomic Diplomatic Behaviour

2 European mfa s in the 2010s: Reforming Diplomatic Capacities in the State-Market Nexus
2.1Political Drivers behind French and German mfa Reforms

2.2The ‘Streamlining’ of the French and German mfa s in the Geoeconomic Field


3 Handling Domestic Agency Relations: The Diplomatic Quest to Implement the Russia Sanctions
3.1Offices of Heads of States and Governments

3.2Other Ministries

3.3Legislative and Sub-State Actors

3.4Business and Market Actors


4 Moving from Domestic Network of Actors to Practices of Actor-Networks


4A New Framework for Studying Sanctions ‘Networked Practices’ of Geoeconomic Diplomacy
1 Theoretical Approach: Studying the Practices of Foreign and Security Policy Implementation
1.1A Pragmatic Understanding to Practices


2 A Half Turn to Practices: The Problem of ipt’s Empirical Biases
2.1Empirical Bias i: Focus on Decision-Making over Policy Implementation

2.2Empirical Bias ii: Disregard of Non-state Actors

2.3Moving beyond the Bias: Analysing ‘Polylateral’ Relationships of Policy Implementation


3 Completing the Practice Turn: Networked Practices in Diplomacy’s Implementation Phase
3.1Actor-Network Theory in Diplomacy Studies

3.2The Framework: Bringing Actor-Network Theory into Diplomacy Studies

3.3Critiques, Limitations, and Competing Understandings of Social Networks


4 Methodology and Data Collection: Challenges, Choices, and Consequences
4.1Accessing Practices through Praxiography

4.2Data Collection through ‘Multimethod Research’: Qualitative Interviews, Textual Analysis, and Ethnographic Observations

4.3The Researching Practitioner vs the Practicing Researcher


5Sanctioning Syria The Networked Practices Shaping eu Sanctions Implementation
1 Case ii: eu Sanctions on Syria – a Framework-Driven Analysis of Networked Practices

2 Defend or Dispute? The Heated Policy Debate about the eu Sanctions’ Role in the Syria Crisis

3 Practices of Actor-Networks: Implementing the eu’s Syria Sanctions
3.1Enforcement Practices

3.2Monitoring Practices

3.3Refinement Practices

3.4Deterrence Practices


4 Exerting Control over Actor-Networks? European Diplomats’ Successes and Limitations as ‘Obligatory Passage Points’


6Conflicting Practices? Ensuring Coherency across Geoeconomic Actor-Networks
1 Expanding the Syria Case: Disentangling eu Sanctions from Other Geoeconomic Instruments
1.1Conflicting Practices between Geoeconomic Instruments: Caught between eu Sanctions and Targeted Economic Assistance

1.2Conflicting Practices between Geoeconomic Partners: The Impact of US Sanctions


2 The Geoeconomic Diplomacy of Economic Sanctions: Instrumentalising Market Shares, Managing Global Interdependencies


7Geoeconomic Diplomats as Sanctions ‘Shapers’
1 Leveraging Geoeconomic Network Positions: Consequences for Policy-Makers and Diplomats

2 The Explanatory Power of Pragmatism: Diplomats as ‘Shapers’ of Geoeconomic Practices

3 Normatively Blindsided? Facing the Moral Dilemmas of Geoeconomic Diplomacy


Conclusions Identifying the Human Impact on Economic Power Politics

Bibliography

Index