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Bleiker, Roland.
Understanding emotions in world politics [electronic
resource] : reflections on method / authors,
Bleiker and Emma Hutchison.
Emotions--Research.
EmotionsPhysiological aspects.
EmotionsSociological aspects.
International relations.
Interdisciplinary research.
152.4072
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Abstract
Although emotions play a significant role in world politics they have so
far received surprisingly little attention by international relations scholars.
Numerous authors have emphasised this shortcoming for several years
now, but strangely there are still no systematic inquiries into emotions nor
even serious methodological discussions about how one would go about
doing so. This article explains this gap by the fact that much of
international relations scholarship is conducted in the social sciences.
Such inquiries can assess emotions up to a certain point, as illustrated by
empirical studies on psychology and foreign policy and constructivist
engagements with identity and community. But conventional social
science methods cannot understand all aspects of phenomena as
ephemeral as those of emotions. Doing so would involve conceptualising
the influence of emotions even when and where it is not immediately
apparent. The ensuing challenges are daunting, but at least some of them
could be met by supplementing social scientific methods with modes of
inquiry emanating from the humanities. We advance three propositions
that would facilitate such cross-disciplinary inquiries: 1) the need to
accept that research can be insightful and valid even if it engages
unobservable phenomena, and even if the results of such inquiries can
neither be measured nor validated empirically; 2) the importance of
examining processes of representation and communication, such as visual
depictions of emotions and the manner in which they shape political
perceptions and dynamics; and 3) a willingness to consider alternative
forms of insight, most notably those stemming from aesthetic sources,
which, we argue, are particularly suited to capture emotions. Taken
together, these propositions highlight the need for a more open-minded
and sustained communication across different fields of knowledge.
Understanding emotions in world politics:
reflections on method
ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON*
INTRODUCTION
Emotions play an obvious and omnipresent role in world politics.1 The
ensuing implications are particularly evident in the context of
transnational communications. Consider how images of the terrorist
attacks of 11 September 2001, broadcast ad infinitum around the world,
have had a decisively emotional impact on how people perceive issues of
security and national identity. Many of the subsequent political actions,
from the swift US-led wars of response in Afghanistan and Iraq to the
suspension of basic civil rights and the legitimisation of torture, would not
have been possible without the highly emotional impact of 11 September
and the equally emotional governmental appeal to defend the world of
good against the forces of evil. But fear and hatred are not the only
emotions that play an important role in world politics. Empathy and
compassion, for instance, can be just as influential. Look at the
unprecedented level of transnational solidarity that emerged in response to
the tsunami that devastated parts of East and South Asia in 2004.
Governments and individual citizens around the world donated so
*
Roland Bleiker is Professor of International Relations, University of Queensland. Emma Hutchison is a
PhD candidate in the School of Political Science and International Studies, University of Queensland.
1 This paper was presented on 10 May 2007 in the Department of International Relations at the
Australian National University. Thanks to Murielle Cozette and Nicole George for the kind
invitation. The paper is in preparation for a special issue of the Review of International Studies on
The politics of global communication. The authors welcome feedback and can be reached at
<bleiker@uq.edu.au> and <e.hutchison@uq.edu.au>. Earlier versions of the paper were presented in
November 2006 at a workshop at the University of St Andrews and at the Swiss Federal Institute of
Technology in Zrich. We gratefully acknowledge useful comments from the various audiences and
from Thomas Bernauer, Stephen Chan, Ned Lebow, Jon Mercer and Frank Schimmelfennig. Emma
would like to thank the University of Queensland Graduate School for a Travel Award that facilitated
research for this article. Roland acknowledges the generous support of a fellowship from the Centre
for Research in the Arts, Social Sciences and Humanities at Cambridge University.
2 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
2
Jonathan Mercer, Rationality and psychology in international politics, International Organization,
59(1) 2005: 77106, at 97.
3
Jonathan Mercer, Approaching emotion in international politics, paper presented at the
International Studies Association Conference, San Diego, California, 25 April 1996, p. 1.
4
Neta C. Crawford, The passion of world politics: propositions on emotions and emotional
relationships, International Security, 24(4) 2000: 11636.
5
Thierry Balzacq and Robert Jervis, Logics of mind and international system: a journey with Robert
Jervis, Review of International Studies, 30(4) 2004: 55982, at 5645.
Understanding emotions in world politics 3
cooperate with each other.6 Across the Atlantic the situation is no different.
Christopher Hill and Andrew Linklater, two senior scholars in the UK,
acknowledge the crucial role of feeling and intuition in decision-making7
and deplore that the study of emotions in world politics is still in its infancy.8
But more than half a decade after Mercers and Crawfords compelling
call to take emotions seriously there has not yet been a systematic scholarly
inquiry into the issues at stake. There have not even been serious
discussions about how one could go about doing so. This absence is
puzzling for two reasons. First, because scholarly debates on method play a
central role in conventional international relations scholarship. One would
thus have expected an equally sustained methodological debate on how to
investigate emotions. Second, because just about every philosopher
considered central to the tradition of international relations scholarship,
from Thucydides to Niccolo Machiavelli, Thomas Hobbes, Immanuel Kant,
Jean Jacques Rousseau and Adam Smith, has engaged the role of emotions
in a detailed manner. Numerous disciplines, from psychology to
sociology, have picked up and carried on these debates, but not so
students of international relations.
The main purpose of this article is twofold: 1) to explain the strange
absence of discussion about how to study emotions and world politics; and
2) to advance suggestions about how to cultivate an intellectual attitude that
may rectify this shortcoming. Given the absence of systematic prior work,
doing so is a rather formidable task. Crawford recognises that the inherently
ephemeral nature of emotions poses major methodological concerns.9
Mercer worries that emotion is hard to define, hard to operationalize, hard
to measure, and hard to isolate from other factors.10 This is why Jervis
acknowledges that he would very much like to produce a study that shows
how emotions and cognitions interact in politics, but at this point the
6
Richard Ned Lebow, Reason, emotion and cooperation, International Politics, 42(3) 2005: 283
313, at 283. See also his Between War and Peace: The Nature of International Crisis (Baltimore:
Johns Hopkins University Press, 1984).
7
Christopher Hill, The Changing Politics of Foreign Policy (Houdmills: Palgrave, 2003), p. 116.
8
Andrew Linklater, Emotions and world politics, Aberystwyth Journal of World Affairs, 2, 2004:
717, at 71.
9
Crawford, The passion of world politics, p. 118.
10
Mercer, Approaching emotion, p. 1.
4 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
12
Corey Robin, Fear: The History of a Political Idea (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2004), pp. 4, 16, 34.
6 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
13
See, for instance, Robin, Fear, pp. 1456; Judith Shklar, Ordinary Vices (Cambridge, MA: Harvard
University Press, 1984), pp. 5, 9; Thomas J. Scheff, Emotions and identity: a theory of ethnic
nationalism, in Craig Calhoun (ed.), Social Theory and the Politics of Identity (Oxford: Blackwell,
1994), pp. 277303, at pp. 27980; Richard R. Rorty, Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1989), pp. 192, 198; and Michael Ignatieff, The Warriors
Honor: Ethnic War and the Modern Conscience (New York: Henry Holt, 1977), pp. 1819.
14
Crawford, The passion of world politics, pp. 116, 118.
15
Ibid., p. 117.
16
Mercer, Rationality and psychology, pp. 97, 817; Mercer, Approaching emotion, p. 2.
17
Lebow, Reason, emotion and cooperation, pp. 2845.
Understanding emotions in world politics 7
18
See Jon Elster, Alchemies of the Mind: Rationality and the Emotions (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 1999).
19
Victor Jeleniewski Seidler, Masculinity, violence and emotional life, in Gillian Bendelow and
Simon J. Williams (eds), Emotions in Social Life: Critical Themes and Contemporary Issues
(Routledge: London, 1998), pp. 193210.
20
Stephen Homes, Passions and Constraint: On the Theory of Liberal Democracy (Chicago:
University of Chicago Press, 1995) and Kathleen H. Jamieson, Dirty Politics: Deception,
Distraction, and Democracy (New York: Oxford University Press, 1992).
21
Louis Menand, Fat man: Herman Kahn and the nuclear age, New Yorker, 27 June 2005; Carol
Cohn, Sex and death in the rational world of defense intellectuals, Signs, 12(4), 1987: 687-718;
Elaine Scarry, The Body in Pain: The Making and Unmaking of the World (New York: Oxford
University Press, 1985).
22
Australian Government, Law Reform Commission, ALRC: are sedition laws necessary and
effective?, media release, 20 March 2006, <www.alrc.gov.au/media/2006/mr2003.htm>.
23
George E. Marcus, Emotions in politics, Annual Review of Political Science, 3, 2000: 22150, at 222.
8 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
The first approach is epitomised by the work of Jervis, Lebow and Janice
Gross Stein, to name only some of the most prominent representatives.24
Hill notes how these approaches seek to understand the complex
relationship between emotion and reason in the process of decision-making.
They oppose the assumption that decisions are taken on the basis of
classical rationality, stressing, instead, that leaders have often no choice
but to draw upon ideas and insights that may involve the emotional rather
than the calculating part of the brain.25 Decision-makers, related studies stress,
are also shaped by deeply-seated emotional predispositions, particularly those
that were acquired in the early, formative stages of their life.26
A recent example of the second approach can be found in an essay that
appeared in Political Psychology, one of the most prominent outlets for
such research. It features a systematic empirical study of causal
attributions for the terrorist attacks of 11 September. Surveying roughly
1,000 US citizens, the authors assess how participants reacted emotionally
to 11 September. They examine how anger and sadness shaped peoples
understanding of the event. These two emotions led to different thought
contents. Anger, the study found, was linked to blame. It intensified the
search for causal explanations of 11 September. Participants who mostly
experienced sadness, by contrast, associated their feelings with loss, which
render causal judgement less relevant to the respective political
perceptions.27
These and numerous other studies on political psychology have made
important contributions to our understanding of emotions and world
24
See, for instance, Robert Jervis, Richard Ned Lebow and Janice Gross Stein, Psychology and
Deterrence (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1985); Robert Jervis, Perception and
Misperception in International Politics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1976); Richard Ned
Lebow and Janice Gross Stein, Rational deterrence theory: I think, therefore I deter, World Politics,
41(2) 1989: 20824; Richard Cottam, Foreign Policy Motivation (Pittsburgh: University of
Pittsburgh Press, 1977); Robert Deborah Larson, The Origins of Containment: A Psychological
Explanation (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1985).
25
Hill, The Changing Politics, p. 116.
26
Alexander L. George and Juliette L. George, Presidential Personality and Performance (Boulder:
Westview, 1998).
27
Deborah A. Small, Jennifer S. Lerner and Baruch Fischhoff, Emotion priming and attributions for
terrorism: Americans reactions in a national field experiment, Political Psychology, 27(2) 2006: 28998.
Understanding emotions in world politics 9
politics. But the respective approaches can understand the role of emotions
only up to a certain point. Three limits stand out.
First, most of the above approaches, particularly those that deal with
psychology and deterrence, still operate within the rational choice paradigm.
Mercer is particularly concerned about the ensuing consequences. He laments
that emotions are seen only as interferences with or deviations from
rationality. Scholars tend to study emotions primarily to explain
misperceptions, thus missing out on a range of other important insights.28
Hill writes of approaches that conceptualise rationality as an ideal type.
But people hardly ever behave rationally in a consistent manner or even
manage to agree on what doing so means in the first place.29 Marcus
disagrees equally with the prevailing assumption that emotions should be
constrained and minimized so that reason dictates judgment with minimal
distraction.30 Jervis and Lebow explain why reason took on such an
exclusive role, even in scholarly endeavours that sought to understand the
role of emotions. The answers, they believe, have to do with the nature of
social science research, which has for decades attempted to subsume emotion to
cognition. Even the field of psychology, they stress, was at the time of their
earlier studies purely cognitive,31 paying little attention to questions of affect.32
Second, empirical inquiries into the emotional attributes of individuals
have difficulties assessing the crucial historical dimensions that underlie
feelings. No matter how carefully designed a systematic survey is, it can
only assess patterns.33 It cannot explain how emotions emerged and
evolved. But for some scholars this is precisely the key to understanding
emotions. Corey Robin, for instance, stresses how political fear always has
a history, and to a surprising degree, it is a history of ideas.34
28
Mercer, Rationality and psychology, p. 77; Approaching emotion, p. 4.
29
Hill, The Changing Politics, p. 97.
30
Marcus, Emotions in politics, p. 221.
31
Lebow, Reason, emotion and cooperation, p. 304.
32
Balzacq and Jervis, Logics of mind, p. 565.
33
Robert Jervis alludes to this problem in The costs of the quantitative study of international
relations, in Klaus Knorr and James N. Rosenau (eds), Contending Approaches to International
Politics (Princeton: Princeton University Press, 1970), pp. 177217, esp. pp. 20415.
34
Robin, Fear, p. 28.
10 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
35
Crawford, The passion of world politics, pp. 131, 136.
36
Ibid., p. 119.
37
Mercer, Approaching emotion, p. 13; Rationality and psychology, pp. 934; Jonathan Mercer,
Anarchy and identity, International Organization, 49(2) 1995: 22952.
38
Lebow, Reason, emotion and cooperation, p. 284.
Understanding emotions in world politics 11
debates about emotions that have been waged in other disciplines, where
constitutive or constructivist approaches have for long recognised that
emotions cannot be separated from their social context. Scholars in
disciplines such as psychology, anthropology, sociology, philosophy and
feminist theory passionately disagree with each other about how emotions
should be understood and appreciated.39 But they agree by and large on the
need to oppose two stereotypical views of emotions: that they are purely
private and irrational phenomena.
Recent literature on the sociology of emotion suggests in particular that
feelings are an active component of identity and community.40 Emotions
help us make sense of ourselves, and situate us in relation to others and the
39
See, for instance, Lila AbuLughod and Catherine A. Lutz (eds), Language and the Politics of
Emotion (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1990); Claire Armon-Jones, Varieties of Affect
(New York: Harvester Wheatsheaf, 1991); Jack M. Barbalet (ed.), Emotions and Sociology (Oxford:
Blackwell, 2002); Jack M. Barbalet, Emotion, Social Theory and Social Structure: A
Macrosociological Approach (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001); Peter Goldie, The
Emotions: A Philosophical Exploration (Oxford: Clarendon Press, 2002); Rom Harr, The Social
Construction of Emotions (Oxford: Blackwell, 1986); Alison M. Jaggar, Love and knowledge:
emotion in feminist epistemology, in Susan R. Bordo and Alison M. Jaggar (eds),
Gender/Body/Knowledge: Feminist Reconstructions of Being and Knowing (New Brunswick:
Rutgers University Press, 1989), pp. 14571; Martha C. Nussbaum, Upheavals of Thought: The
Intelligence of Emotions (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2001); Stephen Leighton (ed.),
Philosophy and the Emotions (Peterborough: Broadview Press, 2003); William M. Reddy, The
Navigation of Feeling: A Framework for the History of Emotions (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2001); Chris Shilling, Emotions, embodiment and the sensation of society,
Sociological Review, 45(2) 1997: 195219; Robert C. Solomon, Not Passions Slave: Emotions and
Choice (Oxford: Oxford University, 2003); Simon J. Williams, Emotions and Social Theory:
Corporeal Reflections on the (Ir)Rational (London: Sage, 1991).
40
See, in particular, Sara Ahmed, The Cultural Politics of Emotion (Edinburgh: Edinburgh University
Press, 2003); Lauren Berlant, The subject of true feeling: pain, privacy, politics, in Jodi Dean (ed.),
Cultural Studies and Political Theory (Ithaca: Cornell University Press, 2000), pp. 42312; Mabel
Berezin, Emotions and political identity: mobilizing affection for the polity, in Jeff Goodwin,
James M. Jasper and Francesca Polletta (eds), Passionate Politics: Emotions and Social Movements
(Chicago: University of Chicago Press), pp. 8398; Mabel Berezin, Secure states: towards a
political sociology of emotion, in Barbalet (ed.), Emotions and Sociology, pp. 3352; Ian Burkitt,
Social Selves: Theories of Social Formation of Personality (London: Sage, 1991), p. 2; Karin M.
Fierke, Whereof we can speak, thereof we must not be silent: trauma, political solipsism and war,
Review of International Studies, 30(4) 2004: 47191; Arlie Russel Hochschild, The sociology of
emotions as a way of seeing, in Bendelow and Williams (eds), Emotions in Social Life, pp. 315;
Kate Nash, Cosmopolitan political community: why does it feel so right?, Constellations: An
International Journal of Critical and Democratic Theory, 10(4) 2003: 50618; Thomas J. Scheff,
Bloody Revenge: Emotions, Nationalism and War (Boulder: Westview Press, 1994); Scheff,
Emotions and identity.
12 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
world that surrounds us. They frame forms of personal and social
understanding, and are thus inclinations that let individuals locate their
identity within a wider collective. As Sara Ahmed suggests, emotions are an
intimate part of the attachments that bind individuals to particular objects
and to others; they colour the relational ties that can come to constitute
identity and belonging.41 Feelings of both pleasure and pain are illustrative
here. An encounter that brings pleasure can create a certain kind of
attachment to whatever brings that joy. Meanwhile, a painful or regrettable
encounter may create a similar attachment, perhaps a negative one, to the
object or other that inflicted the pain. The emotional nature of identity and
communal belonging is implicit, because our sense of identity and
belonging are constituted by the way we attach and situate ourselves within
the social world.
A substantial body of literature also emphasises that emotions
accompany so-called rational actions as much as irrational ones. Robert
Solomon and Martha Nussbaum stress that emotions are important forms of
knowledge and evaluative thought.42 Understood in this way emotions
either involve, or indeed are, judgements. Emotions are always about
something, or are directed at something for specific reasons. Anger implies
that something thought to be bad or wrong has happened, fear can be
attributed to the feeling that something untoward may happen, and similarly,
joy and happiness imply something good. Emotions can thus be seen as
telling us certain things, as providing insights and pointers that could be of
use in our attempts to address social and political challenges. This so-called
cognitive approach to emotions, epitomised by the work of Solomon and
Nussbaum, has always been juxtaposed to more biologically-based
assumptions about emotions. The latter positions, influenced by William
41
Ahmed, The Cultural Politics of Emotion, p. 28.
42
Martha C. Nussbaum, Emotions and womens capabilities, in Jonathan Glover and Martha C.
Nussbaum (eds), Women, Culture, and Development (New York: Oxford University Press, 1995),
pp. 36095, at p. 374. See also Martha C. Nussbaum, Rational emotions, in Martha C. Nussbaum,
Poetic Justice: The Literary Imagination and Public Life (Boston: Beacon, 1995), pp. 5378;
Nussbaum, Upheavals of Thought, pp. 122; Martha C. Nussbaum, Loves Knowledge: Essays on
Philosophy and Literature (New York: Oxford University Press, 1990), p. 45; Robert C. Solomon,
Not Passions Slave, The Joy of Philosophy: Thinking Thin Versus the Passionate Life [Oxford
Scholarship Online] (Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2003); Robert C. Solomon, The Passions:
Emotions and the Meaning of Life, 2nd edn (Indianapolis: Hackett, 1993); Jean-Paul Sartre, Sketch
for a Theory of Emotions, trans. Philip Mairet (London: Routledge, 2002).
Understanding emotions in world politics 13
James but going back to ancient Greek philosophy, assume that emotions
are not primarily thoughts, judgements and beliefs, but bodily sensations.
We refrain from entering or even summarising these debates in detail here,
in part because doing so would go beyond the focus of this paper, in part
because several international relations scholars, such as Crawford, Marcus,
Mercer and Andrew Ross, have already done so convincingly. The latter
two have, in addition, outlined the relevance of recent insights on affects
from the neurosciences and attempted to apply them to the study of political
phenomena.43
THE LIMITS OF SOCIAL SCIENTIFIC INQUIRIES INTO EMOTIONS
Although the centrality of emotions to world politics is now largely
recognised, there are surprisingly few studies that systematically analyse
how emotions matter in concrete political settings. This is puzzling, for
one would have expected at least some serious inquiries more than half a
decade after Crawfords convincing call to take emotions seriously
appeared in one of the most prominent disciplinary journals. Even more
surprising is that there are not even any sustained discussions about how
to go about studying emotions in world politics. The few methodological
debates that do exist tend to focus on inquiries into the personality of
decision-makers and on largely quantitative approaches that assess the
emotional predispositions of leaders and samples of the population.44
Crawford writes little about method other than to suggest that scholars
examine diaries, transcripts and interviews with political leadersaimed
at finding out how emotions are expressed or denied in the context of
decision-makers.45 Mercer hopes that emotions can be recognised by
looking for norms in international politics, but he refrains from further
specifying how exactly this is to be done.46 Most other commentators who
43
Crawford, The passion of world politics, pp. 1268; Marcus, Emotions in politics, pp. 2312;
Mercer, Rationality and psychology, pp. 934; Andrew A. G. Ross, Coming in from the cold:
constructivism and emotions, European Journal of International Relations, 12(2) 2006: 197222, at
2004. See also William E. Connolly, Neuropolitics: Thinking, Culture, Speed (Minneapolis:
University of Minnesota Press, 2002); Rose McDermott, The feeling of rationality: the meaning of
neuroscientific advances for political science, Perspectives on Politics, 2(4) 2004: 691706.
44
Marcus, Emotions in politics, pp. 2356; Small, Lerner and Fischhoff, Emotion priming and
attributions, pp. 2913.
45
Crawford, The passion of world politics, p. 131.
46
Mercer, Approaching emotion, p. 11.
14 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
47
Ross, Coming in from the cold, p. 197.
48
See, for instance, Jenny Edkins, Trauma and the Memory of Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge
University Press, 2003); David Campbell, Writing Security: United States Foreign Policy and the
Politics of Identity (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1998); Michael J. Shapiro, Violent
Cartographies: Mapping Cultures of War (Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1997);
William A. Callahan, War, shame, and time: pastoral governance and national identity in England
and America, International Studies Quarterly, 50(2) 2006: 395419; Paul Saurette, You dissin me?
Humiliation and post 9/11 global politics, Review of International Studies, 32(3) 2006: 495522;
Alex Danchev, Like a dog!: humiliation and shame in the war on terror, Alternatives: Global,
Local, Political, 31(3) 2006: 25983.
49
John Gerald Ruggie, Constructing the World Polity: Essays on International Institutionalism
(London: Routledge, 1998), p. 35.
Understanding emotions in world politics 15
50
Richard Price and Chris ReusSmit, Dangerous liaisons?: critical international theory and
constructivism, European Journal of International Relations, 4(3) 1998: 25994, at 261, 272. For a
contextualisation and critique of these assumptions, see Maja Zehfuss, Constructivism and
International Relations: The Politics of Reality (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2002);
Cynthia Weber, IR: the resurrection: or new frontiers of incorporation, European Journal of
International Relations, 5(4) 1999: 43550.
51
Mercer, Approaching emotion, p. 2.
52
Balzacq and Jervis, Logics of mind, p. 559.
53
Richard Ned Lebow, Fear, interest and honour: outlines of a theory of international relations,
International Affairs, 82(3) 2006: 43148.
54
Crawford, The passion of world politics, p. 155.
55
Ibid., p. 118.
16 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
We also need modes of analysis that capture the more elusive emotional
elements of political events, their mood and spirit, the manner in which they
matter deeply even though rational or even verbal forms of communication
may not be able to express, let alone objectively measure them. We now
seek to identify the type of attitude to knowledge, method and evidence that
would facilitate such an approach to understanding the politics of emotions.
We do so by advancing three particular proposals.
PROPOSAL I: ACCEPT AMBIVALENCE IN THE STUDY OF
EMOTIONS AND POLITICS
Our first proposition is brief and of a preliminary nature. We contend that
the numerous intangible but nevertheless important political dimensions
of emotions can be appreciated only if scholars accept that insight cannot
necessarily produce certainty, or at least not the type of knowledge that is
objective and measurable. Needed is not a systematic theory of emotions,
an attempt to fix the parameters of knowledge once and for all, but a more
open-ended search for a type of scholarly and political sensibility that
could understand the influence of emotions even where and when it is not
immediately apparent. Emotions are inevitably bound up with socio-
cultural values, with how feelings and related political attitudes are
constituted and reconstituted in particular communities. One can only start
to understand the meaning and significance of the ensuing dynamics if
one does not judge them from a pre-conceived conceptual standpoint.
One possible opposition against such explorations of emotions is
obvious: the fear that ensuing insights into politics are irrational and
relativistic at best, meaningless at worst. How, indeed, can perspectives on
political reality be judged as legitimate or not if traditional standards of
judgement do not apply?
Although ephemeral phenomenon such as feelings or mood cannot be
measured through criteria that lie outside their own modes of being, one can
still judge insights into or derived from them. Not all emotions are equally
political or relevant, nor is every attempt to understand and interpret them.
Determining the value of a particular insight is always a process of
negotiating knowledge, of deciding where its rotating axes should be placed
and how its outer boundaries should be drawn. The actual act of judging can
thus be made in reference to the very process of negotiating knowledge.
Insights into emotions could be evaluated not by some prior standard of
reference, but by their ability to generate new and valuable perspectives on
Understanding emotions in world politics 17
56
Quentin Skinner, Vision of Politics, Vol. 1, Regarding Methods (Cambridge: Cambridge University
Press, 2002), pp. 4, 44.
18 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
display.57 Since emotions are inherently internal we can only know them
through practices of representing them, through narratives, symbols or other
ways of communicating feelings and beliefs.58 Consider how surveys, no
matter how meticulously designed and executed, can only assess what
people say about their emotions. The data that such studies produce still
only reflect certain representations about emotions, rather than the emotions
themselves. Ignoring this difference does not make scholarship any more
objective or convincing. Quite to the contrary, doing so leads to major
misperceptions about the significance of emotions and our abilities to
understand them properly.
Since the issue of representation is central to understanding the politics of
emotion we offer a brief elaboration here. We do so by observing what
happens when emotions become most acutely visible: in times of crisis.59
This is not to say that emotions matter only during traumatic events.
Emotions play a central role at all times: they lie at the heart of how
communities, including states, are organised and function. But traumatic
events challenge and often uproot related attachments, exposing their
emotional nature in a particularly acute and visible manner.
Elaine Scarrys innovative and influential work on pain and trauma
convincingly illustrates the issues at stake. She strongly believes that pain,
and the emotions associated with it, is an inherently unknowable
phenomena. One person can never really know what another persons pain
feels like. It cannot be verified on objective grounds. Indeed, Scarry asserts
that pain does not simply resist language but actively destroys it.60 Many
57
Crawford, The passion of world politics, pp. 118, 125.
58
Andrew A. G. Ross, Affective States: Rethinking Passion in Global Politics, PhD Dissertation, Johns
Hopkins University, 2005, p. 11. For comments on the links between language and the expression of
ideas and feelings see Stuart Hall (ed.), Representation: Cultural Representation and Signifying
Practices (London: Sage, 1997) and Michael J. Shapiro, The Politics of Representation: Writing
Practices in Biography, Photography, and Policy Analysis (Madison: University of Wisconsin Press, 1988).
59
Or so suggests Crawford, The passion of world politics, p. 130; Ross, Coming in from the cold, p. 211.
60
Scarry, The Body in Pain, p. 4. For other texts that discuss the difficulty of linguistically expressing
trauma, see Linda Alcoff and Laura Gray, Survivor discourse: transgression or recuperation?,
Signs: Journal of Women and Culture, 18(2) 1993: 26090; Roberta Culbertson, Embodied
memory, transcendence, and telling: recounting trauma, re-establishing the self, New Literary
History, 26(1) 1995: 16995, esp. 173, 176, 17880; Cathy Caruth, Unclaimed Experience: Trauma,
Narrative, History (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1996); Lawrence L. Langer, The
alarmed vision: social suffering and holocaust atrocity, Daedalus, 125(1) 1996: 4765, at 58; Nancy
Understanding emotions in world politics 19
agree with her arguments. A growing body of literature that deals with the
respective phenomena points out that feelings of disbelief are particularly
common among survivors of major traumas, who tend to find that there are
no words to convey adequately what happened. Words suddenly seem
incapable of representing the physical and emotional sensations
experienced. This is one of the reasons why the immediate response to 11
September was one of shock and silence. David Eng and Edkins are among
several commentators who stress how the entire city became utterly
silent,61 how bystanders became speechless, transfixed in horror as they
watched the impossible turning into the real in front of their eyes.62
An odd contradiction arises out of the ensuing political dynamics. The
very fact that emotions are inherently private often leads to a compulsion to
communicate them to others. Or, as seen from the other side of the social
relationship: if I can never truly know another persons emotion, I would at
least like to know the visible causes or manifestations of this emotion.
Consider how the media almost obsessively depicts pain-causing
phenomena as a substitute for actually knowing pain. This includes a range
of highly symbolic representations that give us the illusion of coming as
close as possible to the actual pain, such as images of starvation, of
emaciated concentration camp victims, of hooded prisoners, of broken and
bleeding skins, of blood-stained floors in prison cells.63 The compulsion to
depict bodies in pain, as a replacement for knowing the true emotions
involved, is an old and deeply entrenched cultural practice, reaching from
K. Miller, Portraits of grief: telling details and the testimony of trauma, Differences: A Journal of
Feminist Cultural Studies, 14(3) 2003: 11235, esp. 11216; David B. Morris, About suffering:
voice, genre, and moral community, Daedalus, 125(1) 1996: 2545.
61
David L. Eng, The value of silence, Theatre Journal, 54(1) 2002: 856.
62
Jenny Edkins, Forget trauma? Responses to September 11, International Relations, 16(2) 2002:
24356, at 2434. See also Edkins, Trauma and the Memory of Politics; Michael Humphrey, The
Politics of Atrocity and Reconciliation: From Terror to Trauma (London: Routledge, 2002); Peter Suedfeld,
Reactions to societal trauma: distress and/or eustress, Political Psychology, 18(4) 1997: 84961.
63
Elizabeth Dauphine, The politics of the body in pain: reading the ethics of imagery, Security
Dialogue, 38(2) 2007: 13955. See also W. J. T. Mitchell, The unspeakable and the unimaginable:
word and image in a time of terror, ELH, 72(2) 2005: 291308, at 297.
20 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
early Christian art all the way to the recent photographs of torture at the Abu
Ghraib prisons in Iraq.64
The second major point we want to make here follows from the
recognition that studying representations comes as close to actually
understanding emotions: it is the simple acknowledgment that representations
matter and that they do so in a highly politicised manner. Representation is
the process by which individual emotions acquire a collective dimension
and, in turn, shape social and political processes. Here too, the issue of
trauma is illustrative. Although distant witnesses can never truly understand
the emotions of somebody affected by a tragedy, the process of
communication establishes a public context where the private nature of grief
can be ascribed wider social meaning and significance. Luc Boltanski
speaks of an unstable position between real emotion and fictional
emotion.65 There will always be voices that seek to tell stories about
emotions, weaving their accountsincomplete as they may well beinto
the fabric of both individual and collective conceptions of being and
knowing.66 In other words, individual experiences of trauma can translate,
through processes of representation, into shared or collective experiences.
David Morris refers to a culture of pain while Edkins speaks of a rush to
memory, showing how mechanisms of commemoration and remembrance
intersect private grief with public mourning, and in doing so transcribe
individual injury and the emotions associated with it into a larger, more
collective, political discourse.67
The influence that representations of emotion exert on political dynamics
is particularly evident in the realm of visual culture. A growing body of
literature examines how in the age of globalisation various senses interact
with the visual and how the latter has come to be seen as a particularly
64
See Robert Mills, Suspended Animation: Pain, Pleasure and Punishment in Medieval Culture
(London: Reaktion Books, 2005); E. Ann Kaplan, Trauma Culture: The Politics of Terror and Loss
in Media and Literature (New Brunswick: Rutgers University Press, 2005).
65
Luc Boltanski, Distant Suffering: Morality, Media, and Politics, trans. Graham Burchell
(Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), p. 152.
66
Ahmed, The Cultural Politics of Emotion, pp. 2039, 92100.
67
Edkins, Trauma and the Memory of Politics, pp. 7391; David B. Morris, The Culture of Pain
(Berkeley: University of California Press, 1993). See also Duncan S. A. Bell (ed.), Memory, Trauma and
World Politics: Reflections on the Relationship between Past and Present (New York: Palgrave, 2006).
Understanding emotions in world politics 21
68
See, for instance, William J. T. Mitchell, Picture Theory: Essays on Verbal and Visual
Representation (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 1994); William J. T. Mitchell, What Do
Pictures Want? The Lives and Loves of Images (Chicago: University of Chicago Press, 2005); Scott
McQuire, Visions of Modernity: Representation, Memory, Time and Space in the Age of Camera
(London: Sage, 1998). For a specific application to international relations, see David Campbell,
Representing contemporary war, Ethics and International Affairs, 17(2) 2003: 99108; David
Campbell, Cultural governance and pictorial resistance: reflections on the imaging of war, Review
of International Studies, 29(SI) 2003: 5773; Liam Kennedy, Remembering September 11:
photography as cultural diplomacy, International Affairs, 79(2) 2003: 31526.
69
Elisabeth Bronfen, Reality check: image affects and cultural memory, Differences: A Journal of
Feminist Cultural Studies, 17(1) 2005: 2046.
22 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
70
Michael S. Ball and Gregory H. Smith, Analysing Visual Data (London: Sage, 1992); Michael Emmison and Philip
Smith, Researching the Visual: Images, Objects, Contexts and Interactions in Social and Cultural Inquiry (London:
Sage, 2000); Gillian Rose, Visual Methodologies: An Introduction to the Interpretation of Visual Methods (London:
Sage, 2001); Tony Schirato and Jen Webb, Understanding the Visual (Crows Nest: Allen and Unwin, 2004).
71
Nussbaum, Upheavals of Thought, p. 272; Nussbaum, Poetic Justice, pp. 312.
72
Nussbaum, Upheavals of Thought, pp. 122.
Understanding emotions in world politics 23
73
Hans-Georg Gadamer, Truth and Method (New York: Continuum, 1989), p. 85.
74
The ability of aesthetic sources to capture such emotional truths is elaborated in Jill Bennett,
Empathic Vision: Affect, Trauma, and Contemporary Art (Stanford: Stanford University Press,
2005); Miller, Portraits of grief, pp. 11216; Morris, About suffering, pp. 2931.
75
Selective examples include Johanna Neuman, Lights, Camera, War: Is Media Technology Driving
Politics? (New York: St. Martins Press, 1996); David D. Perlmutter, Photojournalism and Foreign
Policy: Icons of Outrage in International Crises (Westport: Praeger, 1998); Cynthia Weber,
International Relations Theory (London: Routledge, 2005); and the special issues of Millennium:
Journal of International Studies on Images and narratives in world politics, 30(3) 2001; and
Between fear and wonder: international politics, representation and the sublime, 34(3) 2006; as
well as the special issue on Securitization, militarization and visual culture in the worlds of post-
9/11, in Security Dialogue, 38(2) 2007.
24 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
scientists, such as the terrorist expert Walter Laqueur, find much merit in the
use of literature and other aesthetic forms of interpreting political
phenomena.76 They assume that there are inherent benefits in deriving
information from what is one of literatures main assets: to provide detailed
descriptions of situations, including emotional states, that would otherwise
remain beyond our personal experiences.77 But numerous other scholars are
much more sceptical. Alexander Wendt, one of the most influential voices in
contemporary international relations scholarship, believes that poetry,
literature and other humanistic disciplines are not designed to explain
global war or Third World poverty, and as such if we want to solve those
problems our best hope, slim as it maybe, is social science.78 We are fully
aware that we do gross injustice to Wendt by citing this statement out of
context. His work is complex and includes reflections on social science that
call for a methodological pluralism.79 We have highlighted the above passage
only because it captures an attitude that remains prevalent in the more
disciplinary-bound versions of social science research, which considers
humanities-oriented methods as peripheral and perhaps even inappropriate to
the type of real-world issues that preoccupy scholars of international relations.
CONCLUSION: THE NEED FOR CROSS-DISCIPLINARY COMMUN-
ICATION
To understand the complex and seemingly elusive relationship between
emotions and world politics we need to use all of our perceptive and
cognitive tools. Rather than relying on social scientific methods alone, as
scholars of international relations have tended to do, we need the type of
common discourse that Edward Said and other more interdisciplinary
authors advocate: a broad understanding of society and politics that
replaces the current specialisation of knowledge, where only a few fellow
experts are still capable of communicating with each other.80 We may well
even need to heed to Hayden Whites encouragement and look beyond the
76
Walter Laqueur, The Age of Terrorism (Boston: Little, Brown and Company, 1987), pp. 1745.
77
Rorty, Contingency, Irony, and Solidarity, p. xvi.
78
Alexander Wendt, Social Theory of International Politics (Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 1999), p. 90.
79
Ian Shapiro and Alexander Wendt, The difference that realism makes: social science and the politics
of consent, Politics and Society, 20(2) 1992: 197223, at 219.
80
Daniel Barenboim and Edward W. Said, Parallels and Paradoxes: Explorations in Music and
Society (London: Bloomsbury, 2003), pp. 14950.
Understanding emotions in world politics 25
81
Hayden White, The fiction of factual representation, in Hayden White, Tropics of Discourse:
Essays in Cultural Criticism (Baltimore: Johns Hopkins University Press, 1978), p. 123.
26 ROLAND BLEIKER AND EMMA HUTCHISON
senior international relations scholars who have recently called upon his
colleagues to take the humanities more seriously.82 Such calls tend to echo
for a while, then drown in the noise of disciplinary quarrels. Leaving such
quarrels behind is essential if we are to attain a more appropriate
understanding of the relationship between emotions and world politics.
We need a more open-minded and sustained form of communication
between different fields of knowledge. Scientific and social scientific
methods, for instance, can be highly useful to assess how individuals
experience and process emotions. Related inquiries range from
neuroscientific studies into brain stimuli to quantitative surveys of how
individuals respond emotionally to particular political events. Such modes
of analysis are, however, less appropriate when it comes to understanding
the manner in which emotions are represented and communicated. Here
methods from the humanities, such as those designed to interpret texts or
visual sources, can provide us with important insight into the processes
through which individual emotions become collectivised. Once we are
equipped with a more thorough and nuanced understanding of these
relatively elusive but important political features we can return to social
scientific methods, which may then provide us with a more precise
understanding of the actual impact that these representations and
communications of emotions have on political practices.
Taken together, such cross-disciplinary forms of communication not only
reveal emotions as inherent within all political perceptions and decisions,
but also provide us with a better understanding of how these perceptions
and decisions shape political phenomena. Unravelling how individual
emotions are interwoven with social structures of knowledge and belief
may, for instance, increase our ability to understand the motives and
behaviour of states and other actors that play a key role in international
politics. The ensuing insights would be of significance to a range of
inquiries, from studies concerning terrorism, international security and
cooperation to concerns with more normative issues, such as international
justice, multiculturalism and reconciliation.
82
Richard Ned Lebow, The Tragic Vision of Politics: Ethics, Interests and Orders (Cambridge:
Cambridge University Press, 2003), pp. 36092.
Department of International Relations
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KEYNOTES
07 APEC and the search for relevance: 2007 and beyond,
by Lorraine Elliott, John Ravenhill, Helen E. S. Nesadurai and Nick Bisley
06 Religion, faith and global politics,
by Lorraine Elliott, Mark Beeson, Shahram Akbarzadeh, Greg Fealy and Stuart Harris
05 The challenge of United Nations reform,
by Christian Reus-Smit, Marianne Hanson, Hilary Charlesworth and William Maley
04 The North Korean nuclear crisis: Four-plus-twoAn idea whose time has come,
by Peter Van Ness
03 War with Iraq?,
by Amin Saikal, Peter Van Ness, Hugh White, Peter C. Gration and Stuart Harris
02 Refugees and the myth of the borderless world,
by William Maley, Alan Dupont, Jean-Pierre Fonteyne, Greg Fry, James Jupp,
and Thuy Do
01 The day the world changed? Terrorism and world order,
by Stuart Harris, William Maley, Richard Price, Christian Reus-Smit and Amin Saikal
WORKING PAPERS
WP 2007/5 Understanding emotions in world politics: Reflections on method,
by Roland Bleiker and Emma Hutchison
WP 2007/4 Obstinate or obsolete? The US alliance structure in the AsiaPacific,
by William Tow and Amitav Acharya
WP 2007/3 Fighting irrelevance: An economic community with ASEAN
characteristics, by John Ravenhill
WP 2007/2 Case studies in Chinese diplomacy, by Stuart Harris
WP2007/1 What security makes possible: Some thoughts on critical security studies,
by Anthony Burke
WP2006/4 Is China an economic threat to Southeast Asia?, by John Ravenhill
WP2006/3 Blair, Brown and the Gleneagles agenda: Making poverty history, or
confronting the global politics of uneven development?, by Anthony Payne
WP2006/2 American hegemony: A dangerous aspiration, by James L. Richardson
WP2006/1 Russia and Europe: National identity, national interest, pragmatism, or
delusions of empire?, by Robert F. Miller
WP2005/1 Transnational feminism: political strategies and theoretical resources, by
Brooke A. Ackerly and Bina DCosta
WP2004/4 Advocacy or activism: Gender politics in Fiji, by Nicole George
WP2004/3 Whose Oceania? Contending visions of community in Pacific region-
building, by Greg Fry
WP2004/2 Rentier shifts, legitimacy, and the social sources of international financial
hegemonies, by Leonard Seabrooke
WP2004/1 International relations first great debate: Context and tradition,
by Darshan Vigneswaran and Joel Quirk
WP2003/5 The neo-Roman republican legacy and international political theory,
by Steven Slaughter
WP2003/4 The requirements of European international society: Modernity and
nationalism in the Ottoman empire, by Ayla Gl
WP2003/3 Reimagining international society through the emergence of Japanese
imperialism, by Shogo Suzuki
WP2003/2 The evolving dialectic between state-centric and human-centric security,
by Pauline Kerr
WP2003/1 Does China matter? The global economic issues, by Stuart Harris
WP2002/9 Globalisation and Chinas diplomacy: Structure and process,
by Stuart Harris
WP2002/8 Cosmopolitan theory, militaries and the deployment of force,
by Lorraine Elliott and Graeme Cheeseman
WP2002/7 Critical liberalism in international relations,
by James L. Richardson
WP2002/6 Bringing legitimacy back in to neo-Weberian state theory and international
relations, by Leonard Seabrooke
WP2002/5 Corruption is bad: Normative dimensions of the anti-corruption movement,
by Mlada Bukovansky
WP2002/4 Lost at Sea: Australia in the turbulence of world politics,
by Christian Reus-Smit
WP2002/3 Normative progress and pathological practices: The modern state and
identity politics, by Heather Rae
WP2002/2 Obligation and the political authority of international law,
by Christian Reus-Smit
WP2002/1 Engendering international relations: What difference does second-generation
feminism make?, by Jacqui True
WP2001/4 Hegemony, not anarchy: Why China and Japan are not balancing US
unipolar power, by Peter Van Ness
WP2001/3 Threat perception and developmental states in Northeast Asia,
by Tianbiao Zhu
WP2001/2 Political crises in Northeast Asia: An anatomy of the Taiwan and Korean
crises, by Stuart Harris
WP2001/1 Relating global tensions: Modern tribalism and postmodern nationalism,
by Paul James
WP2000/4 The English School in China: A story of how ideas travel and are
transplanted, by Yongjin Zhang
WP2000/3 Death of distance or tyranny of distance? The internet, deterritorialisation,
and the anti-globalisation movement in Australia,
by Ann Capling and Kim Richard Nossal
WP2000/2 Globalisation and security in East Asia, by Peter Van Ness
WP2000/1 Managing the US base issue in Okinawa: A test for Japanese democracy,
by Aurelia George Mulgan
WP1999/5 Internationalisation: What Scholars Make of It?, by Natasha Hamilton-Hart
WP1999/4 The Asian Regional Response to its Economic Crisis and the Global
Implications, by Stuart Harris
WP1999/3 ASEAN and the Southeast Asian Haze: Challenging the Prevailing Modes
of Regional Engagement, by James Cotton
WP1999/2 Australia and Nuclear Arms Control as Good International Citizenship,
by Marianne Hanson
WP1999/1 South Pacific Security and Global Change: The New Agenda, by Greg Fry
WP1998/3 The Rise of an Environmental Superpower? Evaluating Japanese
Environmental Aid to Southeast Asia, by Peter Dauvergne
WP1998/2 Environmental Insecurity, Forest Management, and State Responses in
Southeast Asia, by Peter Dauvergne
WP1998/1 The ASEAN Regional Forum. A Model for Cooperative Security in the
Middle East?, by Michael Leifer
WP1997/8 From Paternalism to Partnership: Australias Relations with ASEAN,
by John Ravenhill
WP1997/7 Globalisation and deforestation in the AsiaPacific, by Peter Dauvergne
WP1997/6 Corporate Power in the Forests of the Solomon Islands,
by Peter Dauvergne
WP1997/5 From Island Factory to Asian Centre: Democracy and Deregulation
in Taiwan, by Gregory W. Noble
WP1997/4 The Foreign Policy of the HawkeKeating Governments: An Interim
Review, by James L. Richardson
WP1997/3 Hedley Bull and International Security, by Samuel M. Makinda
WP1997/2 Island Disputes in Northeast Asia, by Andrew Mack
WP1997/1 Nuclear Breakout: Risks and Possible Responses, by Andrew Mack
WP1996/9 The Rajin-Sonbong Free Trade Zone Experiment: North Korea in Pursuit
of New International Linkages, by James Cotton
WP1996/8 The Declining Probability or War Thesis: How Relevant for the Asia
Pacific?, by James L. Richardson
WP1996/7 The ChinaJapan Relationship and AsiaPacific Regional Security,
by Stuart Harris
WP1996/6 You Just Dont Understand: Troubled Engagements Between Feminists and
IR Theorists, by J. Ann Tickner
WP1996/5 Framing the Islands: Knowledge and Power in Changing Australian Images
of The South Pacific, by Greg Fry
WP1996/4 The Constructivist Turn: Critical Theory After the Cold War,
by Chris Reus-Smit
WP1996/3 Why Democracies Dont Fight Each Other: Democracy and Integration,
by Harvey Starr
WP1996/2 The New Peacekeepers and the New Peacekeeping, by Trevor Findlay
WP1996/1 Ameliorating the Security Dilemma: Structural and Perceptual Approaches
to Strategic Reform, by Andrew Butfoy
WP1995/10 Contending Liberalisms: Past and Present, by James L. Richardson
WP1995/9 Industry Policy in East Asia: A Literature Review, by Heather Smith
WP1995/8 Recasting Common Security, by Andy Butfoy
WP1995/7 Russian Policy Towards the Near Abroad: The Discourse of Hierarchy,
by Wynne Russell
WP1995/6 Culture, Relativism and Democracy: Political Myths About Asia and the
West, by Stephanie Lawson
WP1995/5 The World Trade OrganisationThrowing the Baby Out With the Bath
Water? by P.A. Gordon
WP1995/4 The Neo-Classical Ascendancy: The Australian Economic Policy Community
and Northeast Asian Economic Growth, by Trevor Matthews and John
Ravenhill
WP1995/3 In Search of a New Identity: Revival of Traditional Politics and
Modernisation in Post-Kim Il Sung North Korea, by Alexandre Y. Mansourov
WP1995/2 Implications of TaiwanChinese Relations for Australia, by Stuart Harris
WP1995/1 New Light on the RussoJapanese Territorial Dispute, by Kimie Hara
WP1994/10 Chinas Public Order Crisis and Its Strategic Implications, by Greg Austin
WP1994/9 Nuclear Endgame on the Korean Peninsula, by Andrew Mack
WP1994/8 Human Rights and Cultural Specificity: The Case of Papua New Guinea,
by Michael Jacobsen
WP1994/7 Climbing Back onto the Map?: The South Pacific Forum and the New
Development Orthodoxy, by Greg Fry
WP1994/6 The AsiaPacific: Geopolitical Cauldron or Regional Community?,
by James L. Richardson
WP1994/5 North Koreas Nuclear Program: the Options are Shrinking,
by Andrew Mack
WP1994/4 Policy Networks and Economic Cooperation: Policy Coordination in the
AsiaPacific Region, by Stuart Harris
WP1994/3 Australias Regional Security Environment, by Stuart Harris
WP1994/2 The Future of AsiaPacific Security Studies in Australia, by Pauline Kerr
and Andrew Mack
WP1994/1 Inter-Civilisation Conflict: A Critique of the Huntington Thesis,
by Jacinta OHagan
WP1993/10 Nuclear-Free Zones in the 1990s, by Andrew Mack
WP1993/9 Australian Security in the 1990s, by Andrew Mack
WP1993/8 Concepts of Security in the Post-Cold War, by Andrew Mack
WP1993/7 An American New World Order?, by James L. Richardson
WP1993/6 The Return of Practical Reason, by Hayward R. Alker, Jr.
WP1993/5 Gaddis Lacuna: Foreign Policy Analysis and the End of the Cold War,
by Valerie Hudson
WP1993/4 The Environment and Sustainable Development: An Australian Social
Science Perspective, by Stuart Harris
WP1993/3 Environmental Regulation, Economic Growth and International
Competitiveness, by Stuart Harris
WP1993/2 Strategic Trade Policy: The East Asian Experience, by Trevor Matthews and
John Ravenhill
WP1993/1 The Practice of Common Security: Chinas Borders with Russia and India,
by Gary Klintworth
WP1992/10 Arms Proliferation in the AsiaPacific: Causes and Prospects for Control,
by Andrew Mack
WP1992/9 Nuclear Dilemmas: Korean Security in the 1990s, by Andrew Mack
WP1992/8 The Case For a Nuclear Weapon-Free Zone in Northeast Asia,
by Andrew Mack
WP1992/7 The Gulf War and Australian Political Culture, by James L. Richardson
WP1992/6 The Economic Aspects of Pacific Security, by Stuart Harris
WP1992/5 Moving TargetKoreas Nuclear Proliferation Potential, by Peter Hayes
WP1992/4 Federalism and Australian Foreign Policy, by Stuart Harris
WP1992/3 New Hierarchies in East Asia: The Post-Plaza Division of Labour,
by Mitchell Bernard and John Ravenhill
WP1992/2 Questions About a Post-Cold War International Order, by J.L. Richardson
WP1992/1 After the Cold War and the Gulf War: Prospects for Security in the Asia
Pacific, by Andrew Mack
WP1991/10 The Korean Nuclear Issue, by Song Young Sun
WP1991/9 Implementing Foreign Policy: The Environmental Challenge,
by Stuart Harris
WP1991/8 Australia and the South Pacific: From Strategic Denial to Constructive
Commitment, by Greg Fry
WP1991/7 Civil Society and Nationalism in North Korea: Foundations for Political
Change?, by James Cotton
WP1991/6 The Drawbacks of the Detached View: Russia, the USSR and the Pacific,
by Artem Rudnitskiy
WP1991/5 China as a Third World State: Foreign Policy and Official National Identity,
by Peter Van Ness
WP1991/4 Foreign Policy Analysis, International Relations Theory, and Social Theory:
Critique and Reconstruction, by Ian Bell
WP1991/3 Continuity and Change in Cooperative International Regimes: The Politics
of the Recent Environment Debate in Antarctica,
by Lorraine M. Elliott
WP1991/2 Middle Powers and International Sanctions: Generic Theory Reconsidered,
by Kim Richard Nossal
WP1991/1 International Trade, Ecologically Sustainable Development and the GATT,
by Stuart Harris
WP1990/10 The Influence of the United Nations on the Antarctic System: a Source of
Erosion or Cohesion?, by Stuart Harris
WP1990/9 The Limits to Liberalisation in Industrialising Asia: Three Views of the
State, by James Cotton
WP1990/8 Informal Theories of Rationality, by James L. Richardson
WP1990/7 Peacekeeping in the South Pacific: Some Questions for Prior Consideration,
by Greg Fry
WP1990/6 The Politics of Baltic Nationalisms, by William Maley
WP1990/5 Is Unilateral Trade Liberalisation the Answer?, by Trevor Matthews and
John Ravenhill
WP1990/4 India in Southwest Asia, by Amin Saikal
WP1990/3 The Environmental Challenge: The New International Agenda,
by Stuart Harris
WP1990/2 The Soviet Far East, by Geoff Jukes
WP1990/1 Middle Power Leadership and Coalition Building: The Cairns Croup and the
Uruguay Round, by Andrew Fenton Cooper and Richard A. Higgott
WP1989/5 Economic Change in the International System Implications for Australias
Prospects, by Stuart Harris
WP1989/4 Analysing the Impact of International Sanctions on China,
by Peter Van Ness
WP1989/3 The Politics of Reassurance: Egypt and the Arab World, 19771987,
by Ralph King
WP1989/2 Agricultural Trade and Australian Foreign Policy in the 1990s,
by Stuart Harris
WP1989/1 The Changing Central Balance and Australian Policy, by Coral Bell
STUDIES IN WORLD AFFAIRS
Ethics and Foreign Policy, edited by Paul Keal
Korea Under Roh Tae-woo: Democratisation, Northern Policy, and Inter-Korean
Relations, edited by James Cotton
1. AsianPacific Security After the Cold War, edited by T.B. Millar
and James Walter
2. The Post-Cold War Order: Diagnoses and Prognoses, edited by Richard Leaver
and James L. Richardson
3. Dependent Ally: A Study in Australian Foreign Policy, 3rd ed., by Coral Bell
4. A Peaceful Ocean? Maritime Security in the Pacific in the Post-Cold War Era,
edited by Andrew Mack
5. Asian Flashpoint: Security and the Korean Peninsula, edited by Andrew Mack
6. Taiwan in the AsiaPacific in the 1990s, edited by Gary Klintworth
7. Pacific Cooperation: Building Economic and Security Regimes in the Asia
Pacific, edited by Andrew Mack and John Ravenhill
8. The Gulf War: Critical Perspectives, edited by Michael McKinley
9. Search for Security: The Political Economy of Australias Postwar Foreign
and Defence Policy, by David Lee
10. The New Agenda for Global Security, Cooperating for Peace and Beyond,
edited by Stephanie Lawson
11. Presumptive Engagement: Australias AsiaPacific Security Policy in the 1990s,
by Desmond Ball and Pauline Kerr
12. Discourses of Danger and Dread Frontiers: Australian Defence and Security
Thinking After the Cold War, edited by Graeme Cheeseman and Robert Bruce
13. Pacific Rim Development: Integration and Globalisation in the AsiaPacific
Economy, edited by Peter J. Rimmer
14. Evatt to Evans: The Labor Tradition in Australian Foreign Policy,
edited by David Lee and Christopher Waters
15. CambodiaFrom Red to Blue: Australias Initiative for Peace, by Ken Berry
16. AsiaPacific Security: The EconomicsPolitics Nexus, edited by
Stuart Harris and Andrew Mack
17. Chinas Ocean Frontier: International Law, Military Force and National
Development, by Greg Austin
18. Weak and Strong States in AsiaPacific Societies, edited by Peter Dauvergne
19. Australian Outlook: a History of the Australian Institute of International
Affairs, by J.D. Legge
20. Transforming Asian Socialism: China and Vietnam Compared,
by Anita Chan, Benedict J. Tria Kerkvliet, and Jonathan Unger
21. The Politics of Nuclear Non-Proliferation, edited by Carl Ungerer
and Marianne Hanson
CANBERRA STUDIES IN WORLD AFFAIRS
CS21 Politics, Diplomacy and Islam: Four Case Studies,
edited by Coral Bell
CS22 The Changing Pacific: Four Case Studies, edited by Coral Bell
CS23 New Directions in International Relations? Australian Perspectives,
edited by Richard Higgott
CS24 Australia and the Multinationals: A Study of Power and Bargaining
in the 1980s, by Neil Renwick
CS25 Refugees in the Modern World, edited by Amin Saikal
CS27 Northeast Asian Challenge: Debating the Garnaut Report,
edited by J.L. Richardson
CS28 The ANZUS Documents, edited by Alan Burnett with
Thomas-Durell Young and Christine Wilson
CS29 Human Rights in the AsiaPacific Region, edited by John Girling
CS30 International Relations: Global and Australian Perspectives on
an Evolving Discipline, edited by Richard Higgott and J.L. Richardson