2017
DOI: 10.1080/13642987.2017.1383240
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‘The right and the smart thing to do?’ The Clinton administration and the social construction of emergency in the Kosovo crisis

Abstract: The lack of an international authority capable of interpreting and enforcing international norms in a centralised way often leaves states, especially the most powerful, free to decide whether to recognise or reject the legitimacy of such norms. Therefore, in a decentralised system, the legitimacy and viability of norms crucially depend on whether states perceive them as consistent with their values and interests. Variations in state responses to international norms are often the results of debates that take pl… Show more

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(1 citation statement)
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“…In redressing the neglected influence of the individual in international relations, the IR sub-field of foreign policy analysis (FPA) incorporates insights from a tradition in constructivist theory which emphasizes the collective domestic identity of states over the structural production of state identity through speech and has turned to the speech of elites to study norm legitimization (Betti, 2018;Onuf, 2012). FPA ontology argues that the processes by which state governments achieve their foreign policy aims are determined by their domestic political dynamics, the beliefs and attitudes of individuals involved in decision-making, and how states perceive and are perceived by other state governments (Kubálková, 2001).…”
Section: Foreign Policy Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%
“…In redressing the neglected influence of the individual in international relations, the IR sub-field of foreign policy analysis (FPA) incorporates insights from a tradition in constructivist theory which emphasizes the collective domestic identity of states over the structural production of state identity through speech and has turned to the speech of elites to study norm legitimization (Betti, 2018;Onuf, 2012). FPA ontology argues that the processes by which state governments achieve their foreign policy aims are determined by their domestic political dynamics, the beliefs and attitudes of individuals involved in decision-making, and how states perceive and are perceived by other state governments (Kubálková, 2001).…”
Section: Foreign Policy Analysismentioning
confidence: 99%