September 2024
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25 Reads
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2 Citations
Revista Brasileira de Política Internacional
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September 2024
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25 Reads
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2 Citations
Revista Brasileira de Política Internacional
February 2024
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40 Reads
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1 Citation
The Oxford Handbook of Foreign Policy Analysis repositions the subfield of Foreign Policy Analysis (FPA) to a central analytic location within the study of International Relations (IR). Over the last twenty years, IR has seen a cross-theoretical turn towards incorporating domestic politics, decision-making, agency, practices, and subjectivity—the staples of the FPA subfield. This turn, however, is underdeveloped theoretically, empirically, and methodologically. To reconnect FPA and IR research, this Handbook links FPA to other theoretical traditions in IR, takes FPA to a wider range of state and non-state actors and connects FPA to significant policy challenges and debates. By advancing FPA along these trajectories, the Handbook directly addresses enduring criticisms of FPA, including that it is isolated within IR, it is state-centric, its policy relevance is not always clear, and its theoretical foundations and methodological techniques are stale. The Oxford Handbook of Foreign Policy Analysis provides an inclusive and forward-looking assessment of this subfield. Edited and written by a team of world-class scholars, it sets the agenda for future research in FPA and in IR.
... Interestingly, regardless of their different backgrounds, populists demand greater accountability from the same regional authorities; in Europe, notably 'Brussels', but often also 'Frankfurt' and 'Strasbourg'. 5 Both disengagement and undermining trends are increasingly visible even in governments where they were once uncommon, such as right-wing populists in South America (Saraiva, Wehner, and de Sá Guimarãe 2024;Wajner and Wehner 2023). These commonalities across contexts strengthen the argument that the backlash against regionalism reflects a broader, emerging pattern in contemporary populism, which projects the divide between 'people' and 'elites' onto the international stage (Wajner 2021). ...
September 2024
Revista Brasileira de Política Internacional
... As the perception of the 'Decline of the West, Rise of the Rest' is getting more prevalent, the 'rest', which mainly consists of the new rising powers, is believed to have threatened the status of the established western powers (Zakaria, 2008). There is an increasing concern, especially amongst western countries, that the rising powers would eventually replace them by seeking a higher status position within the social hierarchy (Wehner, 2017). Following the conventional state-centric understandings of status, having such concerns is perfectly understandable for the West. ...
February 2024