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Ask What You Can Do For Your (New) Country - How Host States Use Diasporas (Hardcover)
Loot Price: R2,622
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Ask What You Can Do For Your (New) Country - How Host States Use Diasporas (Hardcover)
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Within recent years a new body of literature has emerged within
international relations on transnationalism and foreign policy.
This literature has thus far focused on the strategic relationship
between home states and their ethnic lobbies abroad, often with
regard to remittances to and politics in the home country. This
book breaks new ground in that it develops a theory about when, how
and for what reasons host states use diasporas and the ethnic
lobbies they generate to advance foreign policy goals. Ask What You
Can Do for Your (New) Country focuses on a previously unexamined
phenomenon: how host governments utilize diasporas to advance their
foreign policy agendas in mutually beneficial ways. As was
demonstrated in the run-up to the 2003 invasion of Iraq, when Iraqi
exiles testified that Saddam Hussein possessed weapons of mass
destruction, ethnic lobbies have been utilized strategically by the
United States (and other countries) for the promotion of political
objectives. Host states have even promoted the creation of such
ethnic lobbies for this purpose. As Nadejda K Marinova shows, those
who participate in such lobbies are of a particular subset of
emigres who are politically active, express a sustained vision for
homeland politics, and who often have existing ties to political
institutions within the host state. These groups then act as a link
between the public and officials in their home state, and other
(generally less politically active) members of the diaspora via a
coordinated effort by the host state. She develops a theoretical
model for determining the conditions under which a host state will
decide to promote and utilize an ethnic lobby, and she tests it
against eight cases, including the Bush Administration's use of the
American Lebanese Cultural Union and the World Council for the
Cedars Revolution in developing policy towards Lebanon and Syria,
the Iraqi National Congress in endorsing the US invasion of Iraq,
the Cuban-American Committee's cooperation with the Carter
administration in attempting to normalize relations with Cuba, and
the International Diaspora Engagement Alliance (IdEA) launched by
Secretary of State Hillary Clinton in 2011 to promote economic
development in a number of countries.
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