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J. Melissen, Matthew Caesar-Gordon (2016)
“Digital diplomacy” and the securing of nationals in a citizen-centric worldGlobal Affairs, 2
(2015)
For example, Melissen and Caesar-Gordon mention the Nepal earthquake in 2015, as well as the
Migrants for Export
Payal Banerjee (2012)
Migrants for Export: How the Philippine State Brokers Labor to the WorldContemporary Sociology: A Journal of Reviews, 41
R. Kunz (2012)
The Discovery of the DiasporaInternational Political Sociology, 6
Alexei Tsinovoi (2019)
The sacred, the secular, and the profane: introducing Agamben’s ‘profane philosophy’ to security studies and the case of Israel’s natural gas discoveriesJournal of International Relations and Development, 22
How the State Department Uses Social Media
Lina Khatib, W. Dutton, Mr. Thelwall (2012)
Public Diplomacy 2.0: A Case Study of the US Digital Outreach TeamThe Middle East Journal, 66
L. Magne (2011)
Organized Uncertainty – Designing A World of Risk ManagementSociety and Business Review, 6
(2012)
For example, expatriates were reframed from being represented as 'traitors' to more positive terms such as 'development agents' and 'entrepreneurs'; see Rahel Kunz
Protecting the Worker-Citizen Abroad
Operating in High-Risk Environments: Advice for Business
The concept of ‘duty of care’ for citizens abroad is grounded in a political rationality where the population is seen as an object for protection by the state. In today’s globalised world, however, this rationality is challenged by increased citizen mobility, budget cuts, new information technologies and the proliferation of new security threats. In recent years the state’s duty of care has received fresh political and scholarly attention, but Diplomatic Studies have so far overlooked how the recent waves of neoliberal reforms have introduced a new political rationality into policy-making circles, where the population is not seen only as an object for protection, but also as a resource for mobilisation. Developing insights from studies of governmentality, this article argues that when this neoliberal political rationality becomes predominant in diplomatic circles, it leads to inversion of the duty of care through new citizen-based practices, steered at a distance by the state.
The Hague Journal of Diplomacy – Brill
Published: Mar 5, 2018
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