| Sign In to gain access to subscriptions and/or personal tools. |
DOI: 10.1177/002088170704400301
Foreign Policy AnalysisFrom Little Acorn to Giant Oak?A.J.R. Groom is Emeritus Professor AJR Groom, Professor of International Relations, Department of Politics and International Relations, Rutherford College, University of Kent, Canterbury (UK). E-mail: ajrgroom{at}hotmail.com That Foreign Policy Analysis (FPA) enjoyed central place in the early study of international relations (IR) can be considered as the starting point for understanding the evolution of this major sub-field. An analysis of the role of foreign policy in different conceptual frameworks points to its centrality for realists but its diminished saliency for pluralists and structuralists. The balance of interacting influences between those who aspire to truth (academics) and those whose concern is with power (practitioners) is crucial if we are to understand for whom FPA is relevant and their needs, and the uses to which it is put. Does FPA reflect or determine policy? What does FPA have to say about current global problems? Precious little is the response. In the United States (US) this is in part due to a dismaying parochialism. But others in Europe have broken out of the traditional mould and new approaches are developing beyond the Western world. Moreover, a role for FPA still remains in the analysis of the effects of spanning boundaries.
|