公共外交

Nancy Snow
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引用次数: 1

摘要

公共外交是政治学和国际关系的一个子领域,涉及研究民族国家和其他国际行为体与全球公众接触以服务于其利益的过程和实践。它是在冷战期间发展起来的,是大众媒体和公众舆论在外交政策管理中兴起的产物。在与苏联的两极意识形态斗争中,美国认识到,通过直接接触在外国民众中获得对政策目标的公众支持,有时比传统的、通常是闭门的政府对政府接触更有效。公共外交仍然不是一个具有基本理论的明确学术领域,尽管它接近软实力的鼻祖约瑟夫·奈(Joseph Nye),使其更接近于强调国际关系中多边多元方法的新自由主义学派。这个术语是对充满贬义的宣传的规范替代,它集中了平民在国际关系中的作用,将公众参与提升到与政府或企业宣传相关的操纵水平之上。在相关行为体之间建立相互理解的价值通常与交流或文化性质的公共外交成果有关,以及优先考虑特定国家外交政策目标和国家利益的信息活动。在20世纪中期,公共外交的重点不是学术性的,而是实践性的——在与民族国家竞争时影响外国舆论。在后冷战时期,美国尤其在东方新兴工业化国家推行市场民主扩张。软实力,即一个国际行动者的文化和行为所产生的消极和积极的吸引力,成为与公共外交相关的一个受欢迎的术语。9/11之后,在美国领导的全球反恐战争和两次对阿富汗和伊拉克的积极干预的背景下,为赢得穆斯林占多数的公众的心而传递信息和阐述自己的议程成为主流。公共外交曾被用于单向传播活动,如美国国务院的“共同价值观倡议”(Shared Values Initiative),但当目标国家的受众将嵌入的信息视为自私自利的宣传时,结果适得其反。在21世纪,全球公民社会及其敌人在公共外交事务上与任何外交官或文化部长不相上下。数字和网络时代的叙事竞争更加深入、广泛和对抗性,而以前决定我们如何思考和思考什么的主流新闻媒体不再主导国家和国际叙事。州际竞争已经转变为非国家行为者之间的竞争,他们利用社交媒体作为一种信息形式,在国际关系中影响战争。随着不同的学者和实践者继续承认公共外交方法,研究议程将继续以案例为导向,以企业为中心(注入公共关系),较少理论性,比其英美根源更全球化。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Public Diplomacy
Public diplomacy is a subfield of political science and international relations that involves study of the process and practice by which nation-states and other international actors engage global publics to serve their interests. It developed during the Cold War as an outgrowth of the rise of mass media and public opinion drivers in foreign policy management. The United States, in a bipolar ideological struggle with the Soviet Union, recognized that gaining public support for policy goals among foreign populations worked better at times through direct engagement than traditional, often closed-door, government-to-government contact. Public diplomacy is still not a defined academic field with an underlying theory, although its proximity to the originator of soft power, Joseph Nye, places it closer to the neoliberal school that emphasizes multilateral pluralistic approaches in international relations. The term is a normative replacement for the more pejorative-laden propaganda, centralizes the role of the civilian in international relations to elevate public engagement above the level of manipulation associated with government or corporate propaganda. Building mutual understanding among the actors involved is the value commonly associated with public diplomacy outcomes of an exchange or cultural nature, along with information activities that prioritize the foreign policy goals and national interests of a particular state. In the mid-20th century, public diplomacy’s emphasis was less scholarly and more practical—to influence foreign opinion in competition with nation-state rivals. In the post-Cold War period, the United States in particular pursued market democracy expansion in the newly industrializing countries of the East. Soft power, the negative and positive attraction that flows from an international actor’s culture and behavior, became the favored term associated with public diplomacy. After 9/11, messaging and making a case for one’s agenda to win the hearts and minds of a Muslim-majority public became predominant against the backdrop of a U.S.-led global war on terrorism and two active interventions in Afghanistan and Iraq. Public diplomacy was utilized in one-way communication campaigns such as the Shared Values Initiative of the U.S. Department of State, which backfired when its target-country audiences rejected the embedded messages as self-serving propaganda. In the 21st century, global civil society and its enemies are on the level of any diplomat or culture minister in matters of public diplomacy. Narrative competition in a digital and networked era is much deeper, broader, and adversarial while the mainstream news media, which formerly set how and what we think about, no longer holds dominance over national and international narratives. Interstate competition has shifted to competition from nonstate actors who use social media as a form of information and influence warfare in international relations. As disparate scholars and practitioners continue to acknowledge public diplomacy approaches, the research agenda will remain case-driven, corporate-centric (with the infusion of public relations), less theoretical, and more global than its Anglo-American roots.
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