Timeline of Foreign Policy Dev PDF
Timeline of Foreign Policy Dev PDF
Timeline of Foreign Policy Dev PDF
1. Decision Making as an Approach to the Study of International Politics by Richard Snyder, Henry Bruck, and
Burton Sapin (1954). In this work, Snyder and his colleagues inspired researchers to look below the nation-
state level to the actual players involved.
2. 'Pre-theories and Theories of Foreign Policy' by James Rosenau, in R. B. Farrell (ed.) Approaches in
Comparative and International Politics (1966). Rosenau encouraged the development of actor-specific theory,
by underscoring the need to integrate information at several levels of analysis, from individual leaders to the
international system, in order to understand foreign policy.
3. Man-Milieu Relationship Hypotheses in the Context of International Politics by Margaret and Harold Sprout
(1956). The Sprouts argued that one needed to look at the 'psycho-milieu' of the individuals and groups making
the foreign policy decision. That is, the international and operational environment or context as it is perceived
and interpreted by decision-makers.
ranged in size from very small groups to large organizations and bureaucracies.
The sub-field of Comparative Foreign Policy developed as a response to James Rosenau's challenge to build a
cross-national and multi-level theory of foreign policy. Foreign policy behaviour, as disparate as a war, a treaty,
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cross-national and multi-level theory of foreign policy. Foreign policy behaviour, as disparate as a war, a treaty,
or a state visit, could now be compared and aggregated. Data was collected on a variety of possible
explanatory factors to determine patterns by which these independent variables were correlated. Researchers
hoped to emerge with a grand unified theory of foreign policy behaviour applicable to all nations and time
periods.
a. Events Data
The collection of 'events data' was used to set up early warning systems that would alert policy makers to crises
in the making around the world. Computerized decision aids and analysis packages began to appear.
b. Integrated Explanations
Research aimed at integrated multilevel explanations. Independent variables at several levels of analysis were
linked by theoretical propositions to types of foreign policy behaviour.
Increasing attention was directed to the mind of the foreign policy decision-maker. The societal context in
which the decision-maker operates is shaped by several factors such as culture, history, geography,
economics, political institutions, ideology, and demographics. Within this societal context, the individual mind is
unique in its own personal beliefs, attitudes, values, experiences, emotions, traits, style, memory, national, and
self-conceptions. To better understand foreign policy, researchers directed their attention to the socio-
psychological context of the decision-maker.
a. Individual Characteristics
Political psychology was employed to understand the personal characteristics of the decision-maker. Under
certain stressful conditions these individual characteristics would become crucial in understanding foreign policy
decisions. Efforts were made to categorize decision-makers according to their foreign policy dispositions.
In addition, the role of perceptions and images in foreign policy was also an important research agenda during
this time. Misperception in foreign policy situations could have grave consequences, and was furnished by the
rampant use of stereotypical images with reference to the 'enemy'.
Research was conducted on 'cognitive constraints', including cognitive bias, heuristic error, the motivation of
leaders, cognitive maps, scripts, and schemas, cognitive style, and the life experience of decision makers.
In addition, the study of culture as an independent variable affecting foreign policy came to the forefront;
analysts considered that the very process of policymaking might be stamped by one's cultural heritage and
socialisation.
b. Persuasion and Diffusion Undertaken by Framing/Meaning Entrepreneurs within IR; Analysis of Interaction
between Competing Entrepreneurs
Representations formed by human agents in foreign policy must first be diffused to others before collective
action can follow. The process by which individual representations are 'diffused' onto others has been under
study. Technology has been useful here, by providing simulation exercises to study how persuasion occurs.
Using cognitive mapping techniques, researchers have been able to detect new knowledge structures within
the minds of decision-makers; this 'social learning' may enhance understanding between different actors and
even facilitate successful negotiations between antagonists.
a. Construction of National Role Conception Identity by Human Agents within the Nation
Questions of national identity formation are still largely furnished by research on national role conception. More
recently, eclectic methods such as discourse analysis, process-tracing and computational modelling have
helped to trace the origin and evolution of identities in conflict.
b. Horizon/Template Analysis
Distinctive patterns of horizon visualisation have been discerned in different cultures, which suggests that an
understanding of 'who we are' plays into the understanding of 'what it is we do'.
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