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ID074653
Title ProperDiscourses and ethics
Other Title Informationthe social construction of British foreign policy
LanguageENG
AuthorGaskarth, Jamie
Publication2006.
Summary / Abstract (Note)The last decade has given rise to a wealth of literature on the ethics of British foreign policy. However, much of this has focused on a few narrow issues based around specific policy actions. As such, it has largely been reactive and mirrored governmental attitudes to the possibilities in foreign policy and the constraints under which decisions are made. Important issues, such as how the concepts of foreign policy and ethics have been described and enacted historically in Britain, the political effects of these past readings, and how the idea of discussing ethics should be so controversial, are underexplored. To investigate these naturalized understandings, this article conducts a discourse analysis of the articulation of foreign policy in Hansard over the last century. In doing so, it seeks to explore how past expressions of foreign policy and ethics privilege certain ways of thinking about policy and exclude others through their modes of description. The effect of these structures, it is argued, is to suppress democratic dissent and individual accountability and marginalize discussion on the (contestable) ethical basis of policy making and policy behavior.
`In' analytical NoteForeign Policy Analysis Vol. 2, No. 4; Oct 2006: p325-341
Journal SourceForeign Policy Analysis Vol: 2 No 4
Key WordsUnited Kingdom ;  International Relations ;  Ethics