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ID164357
Title ProperInternational politics of air disasters: lessons for aviation disaster governance from Asia, 2014–2015
LanguageENG
AuthorChong, Alan
Summary / Abstract (Note)Through a qualitative analysis of three air disasters from Asia in recent years—MH370, MH17 and QZ8501—this article investigates the puzzle of how aviation disasters open up a sovereign state’s domestic governance and foreign policy to international questioning within an anarchic international system. This enquiry thereby highlights the gaps in the global governance of aviation, particularly in the areas of safety and recovery in the wake of aviation disasters. Three linked literatures demonstrate this dynamic. First, aligned with the ‘emotional turn’ in international relations, we show that the portrayal of air disasters and grieving next of kin in global media highlights the politics of grief and trauma. Second, aviation disasters surface the politics of disaster diplomacy in the guise of ‘security competition by proxy’ in the recovery process. Third, we emphasize that these shortfalls in domestic governance and international cooperation demonstrated by the attention-grabbing spectacle of aviation disasters consequently underscore important knowledge, norms and compliance gaps in global aviation governance. Aviation disasters and their aftermath thus shine an international spotlight on the state’s domestic governance and foreign policies in these three manners.
`In' analytical NoteCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 31, No.3-4; Jun-Aug 2018: p.249-271
Journal SourceCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol: 31 No 3-4
Key WordsInternational Politics ;  Asia ;  Air Disasters ;  Aviation Disaster Governance ;  2014–2015


 
 
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