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ID164358
Title ProperCollective memory in Germany and the great foreign policy debate
Other Title Information the case of the European refugee crisis
LanguageENG
AuthorSchuette, Leonard August
Summary / Abstract (Note)Embedded within the wider normalization–continuity debate about the nature of Germany’s actorness, this article assesses the impact of collective memory on German foreign policy during the European refugee crisis. The Federal Republic’s open-door policy in autumn 2015 bewildered many observers who saw it as a self-harming act of charity. Based on a three-stage empirical framework, the article argues that Germany’s initial behaviour cannot be understood without accounting for the influence that collective memory still exerts in Germany today. The open-door policy was irreconcilable with Germany’s immediate material interests, but instead shaped by collective memory-inspired humanitarian and European principles. This conclusion challenges the growing consensus among students of German foreign policy that Germany is becoming a normal actor which has freed itself from the constraints of the past and behaves in congruence with its material interests. This article seeks to make a timely contribution to the knowledge about collective memory in international relations, Germany’s foreign policy in the specific as well as wider context, and the dynamics of the European refugee crisis.
`In' analytical NoteCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol. 31, No.3-4; Jun-Aug 2018: p.272-290
Journal SourceCambridge Review of International Affairs Vol: 31 No 3-4
Key WordsGermany ;  Collective Memory ;  European Refugee Crisis ;  Foreign Policy Debate


 
 
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