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Estranged states: Diplomacy and the containment of national minorities in Europe.
Oleh:
Feldman, Gregory C.
Jenis:
Article from Journal - ilmiah internasional
Dalam koleksi:
Anthropological Theory vol. 05 no. 03 (Sep. 2005)
,
page 219.
Topik:
diplomacy
;
elites
;
national minorities
;
policy and law
;
representation of space
;
state
Fulltext:
219.pdf
(209.1KB)
Isi artikel
This article offers an anthropological perspective on international relations by studying ‘macro-structures’ as the effects of elite-conducted contingent practices. It draws on Der Derian’s genealogical explanation of diplomacy as a second-order mediation among ‘estranged states’. This view sets up the argument that national minorities are constructed as international security concerns within diplomatic discourse because they obstruct nation-states from mutually securing themselves through diplomacy. Thus, each state has a vested interest in supporting other states as stable actors with established national identities. As Others in the nation-state, national minorities threaten the inter-state system as they destabilize any given nationstate’s identity as a diplomatic actor. This situation ostensibly obstructs diplomacy whereby European nation-states seek mutual security by approximating the putative pre-Westphalian unity from which they emerged after Christendom’s collapse. The argument is demonstrated through a critical analysis of post-Second World War international agreements and ethnographic research among western diplomats working on Estonia’s minority integration policy.
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