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Moral Power Games in Foreign Policy explains how gendered foreign policy practices reproduce national identity and enable enhanced moral power in international relations. Using the cases of Russia and Sweden, it demonstrates how moral power games take place in the international realm as contending national values and gendered foreign policy practices collide.
Between 2012 and 2022, Russia and Sweden reflected the increasingly polarised international landscape wherein foreign policies emphasising the protection of traditional values and explicitly feminist foreign policies emerged. Russia has been pursuing a revisionist foreign policy informed by traditional values to advance national interests and outcomes. At the same time, Sweden became a leading state practising and advocating a feminist foreign policy. Moral Power Games in Foreign Policy analyses these relational international dynamics.
Using Ukraine as a case study, the book interrogates how the reproduction of Russian and Swedish national identities through gendered foreign policy practices is implicated in moral power games.
About the author
Patricia Salas Sanchez is an academic specialising in International Relations at the University of Melbourne. Her research and teaching interests are in international political and social theory, international political sociology, gender, foreign policy and diplomacy, and technology. She holds a PhD from Monash University and an MSc from the University of Edinburgh. Patricia has worked in academia, non-governmental organisations, and foreign policy institutions.
Summary
Moral Power Games in Foreign Policy explains how gendered foreign policy practices reproduce national identity and enable enhanced moral power in international relations. Using the cases of Russia and Sweden, it demonstrates how moral power games take place in the international realm as contending national values and gendered foreign policy practices collide.
Between 2012 and 2022, Russia and Sweden reflected the increasingly polarised international landscape wherein foreign policies emphasising the protection of traditional values and explicitly feminist foreign policies emerged. Russia has been pursuing a revisionist foreign policy informed by traditional values to advance national interests and outcomes. At the same time, Sweden became a leading state practising and advocating a feminist foreign policy. Moral Power Games in Foreign Policy analyses these relational international dynamics.
Using Ukraine as a case study, the book interrogates how the reproduction of Russian and Swedish national identities through gendered foreign policy practices is implicated in moral power games.