Richard Higgott, Virginia Proud
Populist-nationalism and foreign policy
Cultural diplomacy, international interaction and resilience
Tartalom
Acknowledgment and Declaration
Foreword
Abstract
Executive Summary
Part 1. Introduction
1.1 Assumptions, Focus and Policy Aim
1.2 Structure
Part 2. The PNZ, Culture and Foreign Policy: Conceptual Analysis
2.1 The Global Distemper and EU International Interaction
2.1.1 Some Historical Context
2.1.2 The Present: Both a Global and a European Crisis
2.2 Some Conceptual Clarifications concerning Populism and Nationalism
2.2.1 Populism
2.2.2 Nationalism
2.2.3 Resilience
2.2.4 Culture, Cultural Relations and Foreign Policy
2.3 Summary of Part 2: Some initial implications
Part 3. The PNZ, Communication and Cultural Foreign Policy: A Users Guide to Actors and Practices
3.1 Who are the nationalist populists? An empirical Guide to Actors and their Networks Across Europe
3.1.1 Nationalist Populist actors across Europe – A snapshot
3.1.2 Networks and Links of the Nationalist Populists
3.1.3 Populist Nationalists, Russia and Vladimir Putin
3.1.4 The U.S. and Breitbart
3.2 The impact of digital disruption on contemporary politics
3.2.1 The new information environment
3.2.2 How Populists take advantage of the new media landscape
3.3 Civil and Cultural Groups: Responses to Populism and Nationalism
3.3.1 Cultural Actors and Populism: Some examples of resistance
3.2.2 Arts, Artists and Resistance: What role for the Arts in the current political conversation?
3.4 Summary: The Importance of Art and Culture
Part 4: Beyond Theory and Practice: Some Political and Policy Implications
4.1 International Relations: Art, Culture and European Foreign Policy Resilience
4.1.1 From the Bottom Up
4.1.2 From the Top Down
4.2 The Opportunities and Limits of Cultural Diplomacy in EU Foreign Policy
Part 5: What is to be done?
Part 6: Conclusion and Some Stylized Recommendations
References
About the authors