Issue #114

Intended for teachers of public diplomacy and related courses, here is an update on resources that may be of general interest. Suggestions for future updates are welcome.

Bruce Gregory can be reached at BGregory@gwu.edu

Naazneen H. Barma and James Goldgeier, “How Not to Bridge the Gap in International Relations,” International Affairs, 98, no. 5 (September 2022). Barma (University of Denver) and Goldgeier (American University) develop four “bridging standards” to mitigate problems that occur when academics and practitioners navigate between the dangers of irrelevance and too cozy relevance. Influence: tactical tips and pitfalls to avoid in policy relevant research and too cozy relevance. Interlocutors: finding the right contacts and mix of analysis and prescription needed by government, private sector and civil society stakeholders. Integrity: think in advance about ethical issues in how research can be politically biased by the provider and misinterpreted by the user. Inclusion: consideration of gender and racial diversity, and variations in access and privilege between the Global South and the rest. The authors support their arguments with two case studies: democratic peace theory and peace-building in post-conflict states.

Thomas Carothers and Benjamin Press, Understanding and Responding to Global Democratic Backsliding, Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, October 20, 2022. In this paper, Carnegie’s Carothers and Press focus much of their attention on three drivers of democratic backsliding, which they argue is confined almost entirely to countries in the Global South, former countries in the Soviet Union and Central and Eastern Europe, and the United States. First, political leaders who mobilize grievances against existing political systems. Second, opportunistic authoritarians who come to power by democratic means but who turn against democracy to maintain power. Third, entrenched interest groups, often the military, that use undemocratic means to regain power. More than other explanations, such as disruptive technologies and the roles of Russia and China, these drivers point to the need for democracy supporters to focus more on “identifying ways to create significant disincentives for backsliding leaders and bolstering countervailing institutions.” Their approach emphasizes differentiation of strategies to take into account diverse motivations and methods in responding to democratic backsliding.

Costas Constantinou and Fiona McConnell, “On the Right to Diplomacy: Historicizing and Theorizing Delegation and Exclusion at the United Nations, Cambridge University Press Online, September 16, 2022. Constantinou (University of Cyprus) and McConnell (University of Oxford) open this imaginative article with brief descriptions of Iroquois Six Nations Chief Deskaheh seeking to speak formally at the League of Nations in 1923 (and being blocked by the UK and Canada) and indigenous nations protesting exclusion from COP26 in Glasgow in 2021. Do the varieties of observer states, non-sovereign polities, NGOs, and minority groups claiming representation status or special competency at the UN have a “natural right” to be recognized or just a moral right that may be recognized occasionally? Constantinou and McConnell answer by arguing for a right to diplomacy (R2D). They build their case on three related lines of inquiry: (1) the need to broaden application of the right of legation in international law, (2) the rise of polylateral diplomacy and pluralism in diplomatic practice beyond legal sovereignty, and (3) increasing support by the UN for expansion of diplomatic representation. Their carefully reasoned article does not offer R2D as a solution to issues of legitimacy in polylateral diplomacy. But it raises important ideas that have potential to achieve greater inclusivity and equitable representation in a state-centric world order.

Larry Diamond, “All Democracy is Global,” Foreign Affairs, September/October, 2022, 182-197. Diamond (Hoover Institution, Stanford University) argues that democracy faces a “formidable new problem” in addition to the sixteen years of global democratic recession documented by Freedom House. “Over the past dozen years,” he states, “the United States has experienced one of the biggest declines in political rights and civil liberties of any country measured by the Freedom House annual survey.” Diamond challenges critics who argue America can no longer competently promote democracy abroad until it attends to its democracy problems at home. He advocates both the urgent importance of strengthening democracy in the United States and, now more than ever, “a more muscular and imaginative approach to spreading” democracy abroad. Democracy promotion needs a “reset.” Starting over requires (1) military strength to keep democracies secure against authoritarian encroachment, (2) economic strength and technological edge, (3) “a supercharged international public engagement campaign to win over hearts and minds through innovative multilingual media operations,” (4) a campaign to empower and sustain independent media, and (5) bipartisan support for a “global information campaign with the vision, stature, and authority to think boldly.” Diamond calls the demise of USIA “one of the biggest mistakes of American global engagement since the end of the Cold War.” However, like others who lament the loss, he offers little in the way of a 21st century approach beyond calling for “a general” to lead a “global information campaign with the vision, stature, and authority to think boldly.”

Edward Elliott, U.S. Sports Diplomacy, CPD Perspectives, USC Center on Public Diplomacy. Elliott (SportsDiplomacy.org) argues sport is an “underplayed, undervalued, and understudied aspect of public diplomacy” and the US lacks a “sports diplomacy strategy.” His report, based on interviews, detailed analysis, and a literature review, is structured in four sections: the infrastructure of sports including the State Department’s Sports Diplomacy office, values inherent in and transmittable through sports, sports as an economic driver, and links between sports, national security, and geopolitics. His 113-page report concludes with a series of organizational and policy recommendations intended to enhance sports diplomacy leadership in the US government, increase relevant training in the State Department, encourage sports diplomacy as a function in the international affairs offices of US cities, create a sports diplomacy hub, and strengthen partnerships between sports organizations and government departments at the state, city, and federal level.

Alisher Faizullaev, Diplomacy for Professionals and Everyone, (Brill Nijhoff, 2022). This is an ambitious, imaginative, and important book by a writer whose career combines scholarship in psychology and political science with assignments as Uzbekistan’s ambassador to the EU, NATO, Belgium and Luxembourg, the Netherlands, and the United Kingdom. Faizullaev examines diplomacy’s variety of meanings in the context of a core distinction between (1) the traditional “politically” motivated diplomacy of states and other entities and (2) “social diplomacy” by which he means “using the diplomatic spirit and the instruments of diplomacy in social life, including everyday situations.” These are not compartmented binaries; they are treated as predominant tendencies with overlapping characteristics. His book is a deeply researched inquiry into essential concepts; performative means and norms; categories of diplomatic actors; and diplomatic functions, methods, skills, and mindsets. Social diplomacy is a trending area of study. Faizullaev’s contributions lie particularly in his exhaustive examination of the literature and clear exposition of current thinking on social interactions, relationship building, and what he calls “the diplomatic spirit” in social diplomacy. Pages of clear graphics illuminate his ideas. A central theme is that diplomacy is essentially “a peaceful endeavor.” Diplomacy that uses deception, manipulation, and threat of force “is not genuine diplomacy.” 

His book raises questions. If the concept of diplomacy is expanded to include most or all human relationships beyond the family, does it lose its particularity and analytical usefulness? Should argument that broadens diplomacy to include “professionals” and “everyone” need to explain more clearly by analysis and example what is not political and social diplomacy? If diplomatic actors are categorized as “primarily” political and “primarily” social actors, what are useful operational criteria for determining relative priorities in contingent circumstances? Faizullaev takes objections to his thinking into account, but he leaves open the door to critique and debate. This too is a contribution. See also Alisher Faizullaev, “On Social Diplomacy,” The Hague Journal of Diplomacy, September 2022.

Jennifer Homans, “George Balanchine’s Soviet Reckoning,”  The New Yorker, September 12, 2022, 20-26. The New Yorker’s dance critic takes us inside the experiences of George Balanchine and the New York City Ballet in the Soviet Union during an exchange arranged by the State Department in October 1962. Balanchine’s perceptions of his native country. Disconnects between the grimness of Soviet security and wildly enthusiastic audiences at performances in Moscow, Leningrad, Kyiv, Tbilisi, and other cities. Contingency evacuation plans after news of the Cuban missile crisis. Balanchine’s reunification with family and personal memories. And his reflections on the meaning of exile after a trip viewed by critics and sponsors as an artistic and political success. Homans’ book, Mr. B: George Balanchine’s 20th Century will be published in November.

Michael Mandelbaum, The Four Ages of American Foreign Policy, (Oxford University Press, 2022). Mandelbaum (Johns Hopkins School of Advanced International Studies, SAIS) adds to his impressive body of work with this sweeping history, valuable for its clear prose, provocative analysis, and clearly presented ages and characteristics of American foreign policy. He divides his history into four ages: weak power (1765-1865), great power (1865-1945), super power (1945- 1990), and hyperpower (1990-2015). The US is now embarked on a fifth age, he argues, its features still murky. Three characteristics constitute what he calls “distinctive properties:” an American desire to disseminate a set of political ideas embodied in institutions and practices, repeated recourse to economic power to achieve its goals, and the influence of the nation’s diplomatic character on the making of foreign policy. These themes are perceptively analyzed and well documented. But his history has little to say about diplomatic practice. A few superstar diplomats make brief appearances (Benjamin Franklin, George Kennan, Henry Kissinger). His book does not address colonial foundations during the century and a half before 1765. The roles of public opinion and America’s democratic institutions in the making of foreign policy are a strength of the book. Unfortunately, diplomacy’s public dimension in the implementation of American foreign policy is largely ignored.

National Security Strategy, The White House, Washington, DC, October 2022. National Security Strategies, required by law, signal strategic goals, values, interests, and broad policy priorities. They do not provide clear guidance on the means needed to achieve them. The Biden Strategy is no exception. It lists three “key pillars” for instruments – itemized as “diplomacy, development cooperation, industrial strategy, economic statecraft, intelligence, and defense” – the absence of a dividing line between foreign policy and domestic policy, the indispensability of alliances and partnerships, and recognition that China is “America’s most consequential geopolitical challenge.” In a section on sharpening tools of statecraft, a single sentence is devoted to diplomacy: “Strengthening American diplomacy by modernizing the Department of State, including through the recent creation of a new bureau for cyberspace and digital policy and a special envoy for critical and emerging technologies.” The Strategy continues a longstanding White House approach to treating diplomacy’s public dimension as an unmentioned integrated element of diplomacy. Disinformation and people-to-people exchanges are name checked in the context of advancing an international technology ecosystem through the US-EU Trade and Technology Council and the Indo-Pacific Quad. The Strategy states it is “a roadmap” for achieving “the future we seek.” It is a vision document, but it is not a road map to the reforms and cost/benefit tradeoffs needed to make hard operational choices. See also, “Around the Halls: Assessing the 2022 National Security Strategy,” Brookings, October 14, 2022.

R. Eugene Parta, Under the Radar: Tracking Western Radio Listeners in the Soviet Union, (Central European University Press, 2022). When asked about key precepts of practice in diplomacy’s public dimension, many practitioners mention “listening” before placing greater emphasis on advocacy, dialogue, relationships, and other categories. Gene Parta, who retired as Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty’s (RFE/RL) director of Audience Research and Program Evaluation, and who was for many years RL’s director of Soviet Area Research, shows convincingly what can be achieved when a community of practice takes “listening” seriously. His impressive “personalized narrative” is the well written story of how US-funded surrogate home service radios worked to understand Soviet attitudes, media use, behavior, and public opinion when most research tools used in Western societies were unavailable. It is a vivid first-hand account of who these practitioners were and the innovative methods they used: traveler interviews, audience segmentation, émigré interviews, samizdat literature, computer simulation, focus groups, and more. RFE/RL’s immense and admired body of research – indispensable to program choices and evaluation methods of broadcasters, and decisions of lawmakers and oversight boards – is archived at Stanford University’s Hoover Institution. It is available to researchers seeking to understand Soviet attitudes and the role of Western broadcasters during the Cold War. Although Under the Radar’s focus is historical, Parta also offers informed views on building broadcaster credibility and trust, how disinformation can be countered, recommendations for a new research center, and a brief afterword on today’s war in Ukraine. An electronic version of the book can be downloaded at no charge.

Mark G. Pomar, Cold War Radio: The Russian Broadcasts of the Voice of America and Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty,  (Potomac Books: 2022). Rarely are the politics more consistently intense in the practitioner communities that comprise American diplomacy’s public dimension than in the foreign language services of US international broadcasters. Pomar (University of Texas, Austin) is a respected Russian studies teacher and scholar, former director of VOA’s Russian Service and USSR Division, and executive director of RFE/RL’s oversight board. In this superb book, he analyzes the understudied policies and program content of US broadcasting’s Russia services in the context of high stakes domestic and international politics during the Cold War. Although attentive to organizational issues and US broadcasting’s origins, the strength of the book is its treatment of personalities, émigré politics, Russian audiences, and program decisions. Topical chapters focus on human rights, culture and the arts, religion, and glasnost. A riveting chapter tells of his interview with Russian novelist and dissident Alexandr Solzhenitsyn and controversies surrounding VOA’s airing of his readings. Cold War Radio explores a broad range of issues: differences between VOA and RFE/RL, broadcasting’s firewalls, surrogate broadcasting’s characteristics, acrimonious editorial meetings, ideological tensions between different generations of Soviet émigrés, and a fundamental divide between “an aggressive stance and a neutral voice” in US broadcasting strategies. Pomar brings the insights of a practitioner and the critical distance of a scholar to a book that is part analysis, part memoir, part advocacy – and overall a rewarding read.

Anthony C. E. Quainton, Eye on the World: A Life in International Service, (Potomac Books, 2022). Ambassador (ret.) Tony Quainton tells the story of his 38-year career as a US Foreign Service officer followed by sixteen years as a professor at American University. Memoirs of career diplomats typically offer insights based on their experiences, the people they encountered, and the policies that provided context for their service. Quainton’s book is no exception. But his book also rewards for other reasons. The variety of his assignments. Field postings in Europe, Africa, the Middle East, Asia, and Latin America. Four ambassadorships (Central African Republic, Nicaragua, Kuwait, Peru). Senior State Department positions: Office for Combating Terrorism, Deputy Inspector General, Assistant Secretary for Diplomatic Security, and Director General of the Foreign Service. His candor about mistakes as well as achievements. His clear writing. His recognition that the Foreign Service, mired in hierarchy and tradition, needed to adapt to new technologies, greater diversity, and 21st century globalization. Practice theory scholars, Foreign Service aspirants, and all interested in diplomacy reforms will find Quainton’s Eye on the World useful, because its insights remain relevant to what is changing and needs to change. 

Targeted Inspection of the U.S. Agency for Global Media: Editorial Independence and Journalistic Standards and Principles,  Office of Inspector General, US Department of State, October 2022. State’s OIG report is useful for its (1) background information on USAGM’s mission, functions, and five broadcasting networks; (2) timeline of legislative, regulatory, and leadership changes; (3) summary of whistleblower complaints, alleged violations of editorial independence, litigation, and court decisions based on managerial actions during the tenure of Trump-appointed USAGM CEO Michael Pack; and (4) OIG’s findings and recommendations regarding policies, actions, procedures, and training relating to editorial independence and firewall requirements for the brief period April 30 to June 5, 2020 just prior to Pack’s tenure. OIG’s key judgments focus on unclear and inconsistent definitions of editorial independence and the firewall in “legislation, regulations, grant agreements, and guidance governing network editorial independence;” the need to update firewall guidance and procedures; and increased training and staff guidance. Four recommendations relate to issues in the Office of Cuba Broadcasting. Two address needed reforms in VOA’s annual language service program reviews. The OIG’s “targeted inspection” leaves many questions unanswered. It did not reach conclusions regarding the Pack era events, stating they are still subject to ongoing review by “independent experts” hired by USAGM’s leadership. It did not speak to the substance of what definitional clarity might entail with regard to editorial independence and the firewall. Nor did it address what organizational and regulatory changes might be required to avoid repetition of abuses. See also Courtney Ruble, “A Watchdog Says the Global Media Agency Lacks Clear and Consistent Policies to Ensure Editorial Independence,” Government Executive, October 17, 2022.

Recent Items of Interest

Goli Ameri and Jay Wang, “How US Leaders Can Best Support Protesters in Iran,”  October 1, 2022, The Hill.

Sohaela Amiri, “Reimagining Cross-Border Ties Through Feminism,”  October 13, 2022, CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy.

Jonathan V. Ahlstrom, “Higher Education and the New Scramble for Africa,” September, 2022, The Foreign Service Journal.

Matt Armstrong, “You’ve Told Us Why the Voice, But You Haven’t Told Us What It Is,”  October 21, 2022;  “Followup,”  October 23, 2022;  “We Don’t Have an Organizational Problem, We Have a Leadership Problem,”  September 21, 2022; “Into the Gray Zone,”  September 12, 2022, MountainRunner.us; “Issues Related to Responding to Foreign Language Influence Activities in the U.S.,”  August 30, 2022, Mountainrunner.substack.com.

Kadir Jun Ayhan, Efe Sevin, Christina Florensya Mandagi, “Conversation on Methodological Approaches to Public Diplomacy,”  October 10, 2022, CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy.

Nicolas Bouchet, Ken Godfrey, and Richard Youngs, “Rising Hostility to Democracy Support: Can It Be Countered?”  September 1, 2022, Carnegie Europe.

“Bruno Latour, French Philosopher and Anthropologist, Dies Aged 75,”  October 9, 2022, The Guardian.

“Chairman Meeks Issues Statement on Introduction of the State Department Authorization Act,”  September 9, 2022, House Foreign Affairs Committee.

Courtney Bublé, “VOA’s Leader Talks About Navigating Employee Morale, International Crises, and More,”  August 23, 2022, Government Executive.

Anthony J. Blinken, “Naming Ambassador Nina Hachigian as Special Representative for Subnational Diplomacy,”  October 3, 2022, US Department of State.

Sarah Cook, Agneli Datt, Ellie Young, and BC Han, “Beijing’s Global Media Influence 2022: Authoritarian Expansion and the Power of Democratic Resilience,”  September 2022, Freedom House; Liam Scott, “China’s Global Media Influence Campaign Growing, Says Freedom House,”  September 8, 2022, VOA.

Deidi Delahanty, “FSO Selection: Changing the Path to the Oral Assessment,”  October 2022, Foreign Service Journal.

David Ellwood, “From Elizabeth II to Charles III: A Triumph of British Ceremonial and Soft Power,”  September 26, 2022, CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy.

Christine Emba, “The World Is Taking America’s Decline Seriously. We Should Too,”  August 29, 2022, The Washington Post. 

David Folkenflik, “Trump’s VOA Chief Paid ‘Extravagantly’ to Investigate Critics: Watchdog,”  August 19, 2022, NPR.

Robert Groves, “When Does A[n] Academic Field Become a Field?”  August 28, 2019, The Provost’s Blog, Georgetown University.

Jory Heckman, “State Dept’s Top HR Official Outlines Vision to Rebuild Diplomatic Workforce,”  August 18, 2022, Federal News Network.

“HJD Diplomacy Reading Lists,”  September 2022, The Hague Journal of Diplomacy.

Robin Holzhauer, “More Americans Seem to Appreciate Diplomacy. Is That Enough?”  September 11, 2022, Diplomatic Diary.

Steve Kelman, “A U.S. Diplomatic Organization That Works,”  September 19, 2022, FCW.

David Klepper, “Russia Finding New Ways to Spread Propaganda Videos,”  October 5, 2022, Associated Press.

David Montgomery, “Can Antony Blinken Update Liberal Foreign Policy for a World Gone Mad,”  August 22, 2022, The Washington Post Magazine.

Ellen Nakashima, “Pentagon Opens Sweeping Review of Clandestine Psychological Operations,”  September 19, 2022, The Washington Post.

Raymond Powell, “DOD’s Diplomats Don’t Need More Rank, Just Less Disdain,”  August 18, 2022, Defense One.

Lee Satterfield, “Last Word,”  September/October 2022, Library of Congress Magazine (p. 28).

Christine Shiau, “A Decade After His Death, Ambassador Stevens’ Legacy is More Urgent Than Ever,”  September 8, 2022, The Hill.

Pete Shmigel, “From the UN to The Late Show, Ukraine’s Diplomats Are Winning,”  September 26, 2022, Atlantic Council.

Craig Simon, “Sinclair Lewis and City Diplomacy,”  September 20, 2022, CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy.

Matt Stevens, “The New ‘Monuments Officers’ Prepare to Protect Art Amid War,”  August 11, 2022, The New York Times.

Bruce Stokes, “The Decline of the City Upon a Hill,”  October 17, 2022, Foreign Affairs.

Zed Tarar, “Did Email Kill the Diplomat?”  August 16, 2022, ISD, The Diplomatic Pouch.

Tom Temin, “How To Improve the Foreign Service,”  September 26, 2022, Federal News Network.

“US Senate Approves Former VOA Chief to Head US Global Broadcasting,”  September 22, 2022, VOA News; “USAGM Applauds Bipartisan Confirmation of Amanda Bennett to be CEO,”  September 22, 2022, USAGM.

Gem From The Past  

Vincent Pouliot and Jérémie Cornut, “Special Issue: Diplomacy in Theory and in Practice,”  Cooperation and Conflict, 50, no. 3 (September 2015), 297-315. The articles in this seven-year-old compendium continue to provide relevant and interesting ideas as practice theory attracts greater attention in diplomacy studies. In their introductory article, “Practice Theory and the Study of Diplomacy: A Research Agenda,” Pouliot (McGill University) and Cornut (Simon Fraser University) frame two central questions. How can practice theory contribute to an understanding of diplomatic practice? How can what diplomatic practitioners do and say advance research and analysis? They go on to discuss how the dialogue stimulated by these questions contributes to research agendas in a wide variety of contexts. Although they define diplomacy in the vocabulary of authoritative representation of polities, relations between polities, and a political process linked to governing, their approach has plenty to offer trending research agendas in the societization of diplomacy.

Other articles include:

Geoffrey Wiseman, (DePaul University), “Diplomatic Practices at the United Nations.”

Andrew F. Cooper (University of Waterloo) and Vincent Pouliot, “How Much Is Global Governance Changing? The G20 as International Practice.”                                                                   

Christian Lequesne, (CERI – Sciences Po), “EU Foreign Policy Through the Lens of Practice Theory: A Different Approach to the European External Action Service.”                            

Merje Kuus, (University of British Coumbia), “Symbolic Power in Diplomatic Practice: Matters of Style in Brussels.”

Jérémie Cornut, “To Be a Diplomat Abroad: Diplomatic Practice at Embassies.”

Patricia M. Goff (Wilfred Laurier University), “Public Diplomacy at the Global Level: The Alliance of Civilizations As a Community of Practice.”

An archive of Diplomacy’s  Public Dimension: Books, Articles, Websites  (2002-present) is maintained at George Washington University’s Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication.  Current issues are also posted by the University of Southern California’s Center on Public Diplomacy, and the Public Diplomacy Council of America.

Recognizing a forgotten hero in US diplomatic history

Flier for "A Diplomat of Consequence" film screening event

IPDGC screens documentary on Ambassador Ebenezer D. Bassett

The film, A Diplomat of Consequence, tells the story of a groundbreaking diplomat and pioneer on international human rights and examines the legacy of racial diversity today, 150 years after his appointment. This documentary was written, directed and produced by Christopher Teal. He is a career member of the Senior Foreign Service with the U.S. State Department and currently a Public Diplomacy Fellow with IPDGC at the George Washington University.

Ebenezer Don Carlos Bassett was appointed United States Ambassador to Haiti in 1869. He was the first African-American diplomat and the fourth U.S. ambassador to Haiti since the two countries established relations in 1862. Bassett was appointed as new leaders emerged among free African Americans after the American Civil War.

Collage of 4 photos and drawings of Ebenezer Don Carlos Bassett

The documentary explores Bassett’s roles as He was an educator, abolitionist, and civil rights activist.

He was among the earliest advocates to promote human rights in foreign policy. His courage in the face of threats during his tenure place him among the greats of diplomatic and American history. Along with public archives on Bassett’s life, newly found information from family members and never before seen material from his four-decade relationship with Frederick Douglass are explored in the documentary.

This is not just an historical documentary, however. Bassett’s legacy demonstrates to broader audiences what diplomats have accomplished and what they do in today’s complicated environment. Bringing in contemporary voices of minority diplomats is a crucial component of why diversity in foreign affairs still is imperative for successful engagement today.


FILM SCREENING: A Diplomat of Consequence; Tuesday, October 18,

IPDGC, in collaboration with LEAP and the Office of Office of Diversity, Equity and Inclusion, and student organization, Young Black Professionals in International Affairs (YBPIA), invites you to the screening of the film, A Diplomat of Consequence. 

Following the screening will be a panel discussion with the filmmaker Chris Teal, Stacy Williams Deputy Director of the Haitian Affairs Office, State Department, and Celeste Robertson, retired USAID Officer. The discussion will be moderated by Dr. William Youmans, Director of IPDGC.

Event Details:

Tuesday, October 18; 5-7pm

Lindner Room 602, Elliott School, 1957 E St NW, Washington, DC 20052

Pizza and sodas are provided. RSVPs required for the event.

The Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication welcomes Visiting Scholars

The Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication (IPDGC) has inaugurated a Visiting Scholar program this year. We will welcome and host up to four visitors annually whose research advances scholarship and public understanding of the subject matters central to IPDGC’s mission. The Visiting Scholars become part of the Institute’s academic community while pursuing their own research projects. The purpose of this program is to give the university and IPDGC greater international exposure, while enriching our students with education beyond the classroom.

Although this is our first year, we will welcome up to four Scholars. The first two have already arrived at GW.

Headshot of Tran Nguyen Khang

Tran Nguyen Khang is a professor in the Faculty of International Relations at University of Social Sciences and Humanities (USSH), Ho Chi Minh City, Vietnam, is on a Fulbright fellowship to conduct research into “The construction of American Soft Power through Museum Diplomacy and its implication for Vietnam” over the 2022-2023 academic year. Khang teaches Globalization, Global Issues, Power in International Relations, and Intercultural Communication at USSH.

Khang is here for the academic year to explore how the United States presents the relationship between the two countries through museum diplomacy, and how this impacts the Vietnamese and international public. He will also compare how the countries, the United States and Vietnam, presents the Vietnam War at their respective museums and interactions with the public. The research project hopes to provide an assessment of the inter-subjectivity of American soft power through museum diplomacy and its implication for Vietnam’s experience.

Headshot of Udane Goikoetxea Bilbao

Udane Goikoetxea Bilbao is an assistant professor in the Department of Journalism at the University of the Basque Country (UPV/EHU). Bilbao teaches specialized courses in journalism as well as communication theories, ethics and public speaking.

Udane, a former journalist herself, will be spending three months with IPDGC conducting research on the influence of speed on journalism. She is interested in how the temporality of online journalism has shifted our notions of how long news stays fresh and the expectations around deadlines.  She wants to explore the prospects of slow journalism.

Our esteemed Visiting Scholars are available for class visits, meetings with faculty and students, as well as public talks. Contact IPDGC at ipdgc@gwu.edu for more information.

IPDGC introduces the 2022-2023 PD Fellow

Christopher Teal speaks on camera while seated

IPDGC and the GW School of Media and Public Affairs welcomes Christopher Teal, the U.S. State Department Public Diplomacy Fellow for the 2022-2024 academic years. Chris has been with the U.S. State Department since 1999; handling various responsibilities including overseas assignments, leading a team responsible for diplomatic Career Development, and also teaching diplomacy, civil/military relations, human rights, peace keeping, and media/security policy. 

Man seated in a chair speaking.
Christopher Teal

Chris was also awarded the Una Chapman Cox Fellowship to direct, write, and produce a documentary on the first African American diplomat, Ebenezer D. Bassett.  The film, A Diplomat of Consequence, tells the story of this groundbreaking diplomat 150 years after his appointment.

IPDGC recently spoke to Chris about coming back to GW:

Learn more about our new PD Fellow Chris Teal, and other Public Diplomacy Fellows.

Summer support for IPDGC intern

The Walter Roberts Endowment (WRE) and the Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication (IPDGC) continue with funding support for students who have unpaid or part-time public diplomacy internships in summer 2022.

This season, IPDGC will have GW graduate student Luke Liu working with us on revitalizing the Institute’s digital engagement strategy.

Liu is in the MA International Affairs program at the Elliott School of International Affairs. Having worked on expanding his former college newspaper’s online presence, he is confident of helping IPDGC better our digital reach to our audiences.

In addition, with his editorial experiences, skills in research and interviews, Liu is ready to work on content that showcases the work of public diplomacy, new and global media, communication and foreign policy.

We look forward to new and exciting ways to engage with you this fall. In the meantime, have a great summer!

Issue #112

Intended for teachers of public diplomacy and related courses, here is an update on resources that may be of general interest. Suggestions for future updates are welcome.

Bruce Gregory can be reached at BGregory@gwu.edu

Anne Applebaum, “There Is No Liberal World Order,” The Atlantic, May 2022, 9-12. Atlantic staff writer Applebaum makes five claims in the context of lessons from Ukraine. Four concern the necessity of enforcing liberal world order rules, downsides of trading with autocrats, dramatically shifting sources of energy, and serious attention to teaching, debating, improving, and defending democracy. A fifth is the “need to pull together the disparate parts of the U.S. government that think about communication, not to do propaganda but to reach more people around the world with better information and to stop autocracies from distorting that knowledge.” Her toolkit: a Russian language television station to compete with Putin’s propaganda; more programming in Mandarin and Uyghur; increased programming and research spending for RFE/RL, Radio Free Asia, and Radio Marti; rethinking education and culture (“So much of what passes for cultural diplomacy runs on autopilot.”); a Russian language university in Vilnius or Warsaw for thinkers and intellectuals leaving Moscow; and more spending on education in Arabic, Hindi, and Persian. Her organizational model is the way Americans “assembled the Department of Homeland Security out of disparate agencies after 9/11.”

Eliot A. Cohen, “The Return of Statecraft: Back to Basics in the Post-American World,”  Foreign Affairs, May/June 2022. Cohen (Johns Hopkins University) makes two arguments in this article. First, grand strategy and general principles are little help in devising policies and making decisions in a world shaped by contingencies, personalities, and events that surprise. Second, priority attention to US statecraft and an audit of its architecture are required for the quick pragmatic decisions needed in today’s chaotic reality. Cohen gives the US Marine Corps high marks as the only national security actor to engage in “harsh self-scrutiny.” His agenda for better diplomacy includes the following. The US “might revive the US Information Agency.” (As with most recent head fakes in this direction he offers no ideas as to its merits or feasibility.) More persuasively, he argues it is long past time to invest heavily in professional education and development – including “creating a state-run academy for foreign policy professionals from across government.” Cohen also calls for restoring procedural competence by repairing the “broken” system for appointing professionals to top posts in the State Department and Pentagon, and fewer political appointees to ambassadorships and the upper echelons of government.

Luiza Duarte, Robert Albro, and Eric Hershberg, “Communicating Influence: China’s Messaging in Latin America and the Caribbean,” Center for Latin American and Latino Studies (CLALS), American University, February 2022. The authors, researchers at American University’s CLALS, examine ways China has used soft power to expand its influence in the region. Their report focuses on four topics. (1) China’s public diplomacy “with Chinese characteristics” and the role of Confucius Institutes. (2) Technology and the “Digital Silk Road.” (3) China’s Covid-19 diplomacy in the region. (4) The growing presence of China’s state media. The authors conclude China’s government, state media, and corporations are promoting narratives in the region that are gaining sophistication in format and content – and point to the need for further research on their impact. The report was supported with funding from the Institute for War & Peace Reporting and the Department of State. CLALS researchers and outside collaborators have written separate case studies on China’s engagement with Argentina, Brazil, Chile, and El Salvador. Links can be downloaded here.

Natalia Grincheva, “Beyond the Scorecard Diplomacy: From Soft Power Rankings to Critical Inductive Geography,” Convergence: The International Journal of Research Into New Media Technologies, 2022,Vol. 28(1), 70-91. Grincheva (University of Melbourne) begins this article with a definition of data visualization: “a use of computation techniques to display data in order to illustrate relationships, phenomena, or causations.” She then offers a critique of Portland Soft Power 30, a ranking index that compares countries’ soft power resources based on metrics in six domains: political institutions, cultural appeal, diplomatic networks, higher education, economic models, and digital global engagement. Global ranking systems, she argues, suffer from “simplistic quantifications,” “inaccurate causality . . . from resources to outcomes,” and reduction of “complex reality to a preferred interpretation” that projects Western values and neoliberal policy reforms. To overcome problems of data visualization and pitfalls of ranking soft power through “whole country” measuring, she explores two alternatives. An inductive geo-visualization framework attentive to variables overlooked in soft power rankings. And a “Deep mapping” method used to integrate different types of data through cartographic display of multiple layers for each country, geographical spread and reach, and how actors’ soft power changes across different countries.

Marcus Holmes, Face-to-Face Diplomacy: Social Neuroscience and International Relations,(Cambridge University Press, Paperback, 2019). At a glance, this book seems a perfect fit for public diplomacy’s “last three feet” devotees. Then on first inspection, perhaps not, since its focus is on the summit diplomacy of leaders. But on a close read there is much that is relevant to concepts and practice in diplomacy’s public dimension even though this is not the book’s purpose. Holmes (College of William and Mary) is concerned to show how psychology and neuroscience can be used to challenge the “problem of intentions” in face-to-face diplomacy – meaning “it is difficult, if not impossible to look inside the minds of other people in order to experience what they are thinking.” His book offers a theory of how face-to-face interaction can overcome the problem by allowing participants to simulate the specific intentions of others using a “mirroring system” – a brain structure that “is able to pick up on microchanges in facial expressions and realize subtle shifts in the emotional states of others that conveys their levels of sincerity.” Holmes argues his theory is applicable in a wide range of diplomacy contexts. He explains his theory in the introduction and opening chapter. The rest of the book is devoted to discussing four case studies of summit diplomacy: interactions between Mikhail Gorbachev and Ronald Reagan at the end of the Cold War, George H. W. Bush’s and James Baker’s interactions with Gorbachev on the reunification of Germany, the Camp David Accords between Israel and Egypt mediated by Jimmy Carter, and the problem of deception in Neville Chamberlain’s face-to-face meeting with Adolph Hitler in Munich. These chapters reward both as evidence for his theory and as well-researched inquiries into summit diplomacy.

Dimitra Kizlari and Domenico Valenza, “A Balancing Act? Inter-Ministerial Co-operation in the Work of Cultural Attachés,” The Hague Journal of Diplomacy, 16 (2021), 493-518. Although Kizlari (University College London) and Valenza (Ghent University) place their research in three European cases – Italy, the Netherlands, and Sweden – their excellent article has broad global relevance to the study of cultural diplomacy. The authors analyze practices and discourses in the interactions of Ministries of Foreign Affairs (MFA) and Ministries of Culture (MoC) in five areas: appointments, hierarchy, funding, agenda-setting, and evaluation. In Italy, cultural attachés, exclusively linked to the MFA, cooperate with other ministries ad hoc. In Sweden and the Netherlands, the MFA and MoC create common conditions for cultural attachés in budgeting and planning. The MoC leads coordination in Sweden and the MFA in the Netherlands. Strengths of this article lie in how it frames enduring issues in cultural diplomacy and its use of practitioner interviews to support conceptual claims. Worthy of further study are its observations on how structural arrangements impact utilitarian perceptions of the role of culture in diplomacy and the critical importance of practitioners “on the ground.”

Christian Lequesne, ed., Ministries of Foreign Affairs in the World: Actors of State Diplomacy, (Koninklijke Brill, 2022). In this rich collection, Lequesne (Sciences Po, CERI, Paris) has compiled essays by leading scholars on the comparative roles of ministries of foreign affairs (MFAs) in today’s diplomacy. His goal is to fill a literature gap created by preferences of researchers to study new diplomatic institutions, the rise of new actors and demise of the monopoly MFAs held previously, research challenges in non-democratic states, and MFAs’ characteristic low transparency. Some chapters were published in a special issue of The Hague Journalof Diplomacy in 2020. Others are original. 

— Christian Lequesne, “Ministries of Foreign Affairs: Crucial Institution to be Revisited.”

— Karla Gobo (Higher School of Advertising and Marketing, Rio de Janeiro) and Claudia Santos (Federal University of Paraná), “The Social Origin of Career Diplomats in Brazil’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs: Still an Upper Class Elite.”

— Birgitta Niklasson (University of Gothenburg), “The Gendered Networking of Diplomats.”

— Christian Lequesne, Gabriel Castillo (Sciences Po, CERI Paris), et.al“Ethnic Diversity in the Recruitment of Diplomats: Why Ministries of Foreign Affairs Take the Issue Seriously.”

— Guillaume Beaud (Sciences Po, CERI Paris), “The Making of a Diplomatic Elite in a Revolutionary State: Loyalty, Expertise and Representatives in Iran’s Ministry of Foreign Affairs.”

— Geoffrey Wiseman (DePaul University), “Expertise and Politics in Ministries of Foreign Affairs: The Politician-Diplomat Nexus.” 

— Andrew F. Cooper (University of Waterloo), “The Impact of Leader-Centric Populism on Career Diplomats: Tests of Loyalty, Voice, and Exit in Ministries of Foreign Affairs.” 

— Jorge A. Schiavon (Centro de Investigación y Docencia Económicas, Mexico) and Bruno Figueroa (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Mexico), “The Impact of Globalization and Neoliberal Structural Reforms on the Mexican Ministry of Foreign Affairs.” 

— Kim B. Olsen (Danish-Arab Partnership Program, Tunis), “Implementing the EU’s Russia Sanctions: A Geoeconomic Test Case for French and German Ministries of Foreign Affairs.” 

— Pierre-Bruno Ruffini (University of Le Havre), “Ministries of Foreign Affairs and the Challenge of Science Diplomacy.” 

— Jan Melissen (University of Leiden), “Consular Diplomacy in the Era of Growing Mobility.” — Casper Klynge (Microsoft, Brussels), Mikael Ekman, and Nikolaj Juncher Waedegaard (Ministry of Foreign Affairs, Denmark), “Diplomacy in the Digital Age: Lessons from Denmark’s TechPlomacy Initiative.” 

— Ilan Manor (University of Oxford) and Rhys Crilley (University of Glasgow), “The Mediatisation of Ministries of Foreign Affairs: Diplomacy in the New Media Ecology.” (full text) 

— Damien Spry (University of South Australia), “From Delhi to Dili: Facebook Diplomacy by Ministries of Foreign Affairs in the Asia-Pacific.” 

— Iver B. Neumann (Fridtjof Nansen Institute, Oslo), “Approaching Ministries of Foreign Affairs Through Ethnographic Work.” 

— Marcus Holmes (The College of William and Mary), “Diplomacy in the Rearview Mirror: Implications of Face-to-Face Diplomacy Ritual Disruptions for Ministries of Foreign Affairs.” 

— Jason Dittmer (University College London), “Distributed Agency: Foreign Policy sans MFA.” (full text) 

— Thierry Balzacq (Sciences Po, CERI Paris), “The Site of Foreign Policy: A Field Theory Account of Ministries of Foreign Affairs.”

“Public Diplomacy for the 2020s and Beyond: Investment in Social Media and Artificial Intelligence Show the Way Ahead,” US State Department Diplomacy Lab, May 2022. This report was written by six American University School of International Service seniors (Nicholas Dohemann, Dexter Hawes, Jenny Jecrois, William Manogue, Bailey Shuster, and Jane Tilles) at the request of State’s Office of Policy, Planning, and Resources for the Under Secretary of Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs. The students’ recommendations include humor in digital diplomacy, short form looping videos, influencer marketing, giveaway marketing, artificial intelligence, and general suggestions for State’s social media and AI strategies. (Courtesy of Sherry Mueller and Tony Wayne)

US Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, “ACPD Official Meeting Minutes: February 24, 2022,”  The Commission’s virtual public meeting focused on public diplomacy practice from a field perspective and release of its “2021 Comprehensive Annual Report on Public Diplomacy and International Broadcasting.”  A panel introduced by the Commission’s Executive Director Vivian Walker featured three career diplomats: Ginny Elliott, PAO, US Embassy, Ghana; Shayna Cram, PAO, US Embassy, Kyrgyz Republic; and Tuck Evans, PAO, US Embassy, Guatemala. The Commission’s Senior Advisor Deneyse Kirkpatrick moderated a Q&A. The document is a transcript of their remarks. 

Vivian S. Walker, Kathy R. Fitzpatrick, and Jay Wang, “Exploring U.S. Public Diplomacy’s Domestic Dimensions: Purviews, Publics, and Policies,” US Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy, April 2022. This Commission report summarizes ideas and challenges in the US government’s increasing use of public diplomacy programs and resources to engage domestic audiences. It is based on a virtual workshop with 45 practitioners, scholars, policy analysts, and journalists in October 2021. The report includes three scene setter remarks: Jennifer Hall Godfrey (former State Department senior official for Public Diplomacy and Public Affairs), “Engaging Americans through Public Diplomacy;” Nicholas J. Cull, (University of Southern California), “Public Diplomacy’s Domestic Dimension: Some Historical Notes;” and Richard Wike (Pew Research Center), “American Public Opinion and International Engagement.” Following are three working group reports. Vivian S. Walker (the Commission’s Executive Director) summarizes views on the scope, authorities, and strategic outcomes of domestic engagement. Kathy R. Fitzpatrick (University of South Florida) discusses the meaning of domestic publics and ways public diplomacy goals could be addressed through outreach to them. Jay Wang (Center on Public Diplomacy, USC Annenberg) summarizes policy and resource questions. The report floats good ideas and raises important unanswered questions. Particularly useful are Nick Cull’s cautions that connect needed rethinking of a hard binary between foreign and domestic with awareness of potential risks grounded partisan politics and historical concerns over domestic engagement.

“U.S. Department of State and U.S. Agency for International Development, Fact Sheet,” U.S Department of State, March 28, 2022.  Numbers tell a story. The combined White House request for State and USAID spending in FY 2023 is $60.4 billion, a 3% increase from FY 2022. The request for national defense spending is $813 billion (including $773 billion for the Pentagon), a 4% increase from FY 2022 and $30 billion more than approved by Congress for this year. State’s budget Fact Sheet itemizes a range of diplomacy and development priorities, including $7.6 billion to “recruit, train, and develop” a workforce that is more reflective of the diversity of the United States. Missing, as fp21 points out, is any mention of Secretary Blinken’s modernization agenda. The absence of any specific mention of public diplomacy is perhaps further evidence that State’s global public affairs and exchanges are mainstreamed in national discourse on diplomacy.

Zed Tarar, “Analysis | Is It Time to Delete Parts of the State Department,”  The Diplomatic Pouch, Institute for the Study of Diplomacy, Georgetown University, March 29, 2022. Tarar, a US Foreign Service officer serving in London, continues to publish imaginative blog posts with this argument for organizational subtraction. He borrows UVA professor Leidy Klotz’s idea that removing elements and frictions from systems can unlock latent productivity gains to make a case for subtraction’s advantage over additive solutions in the Department of State. His examples include reducing the number of Senate-confirmed positions, removing deputy assistant secretary positions, and State’s outsourcing of the task of cost-of-living adjustments. He points to the merger of USIA and State as one possible example of an addition that failed to create efficiencies. Tarar concludes by arguing that the goal is not subtraction per se or reducing complexity; “rather it is to unlock otherwise latent potential.” 

“Truth Over Disinformation: Supporting Freedom and Democracy,”  USAGM Strategic Plan 2022-2066, February 2022. The US Agency for Global Media’s new strategic plan is comparable in substance and format to its predecessor 2018-2022 plan. USAGM’s mission (supporting freedom and democracy) and long-term strategic goals (expanding freedom of information and expression, sharing America’s democratic experience and values), and lists of “impact” and “agility” objectives are similar with nuanced differences in language and context. There is a new impact objective: “Reach and engage underserved audiences, including women, youth, and marginalized populations.” USAGM’s strategic plans, written from a public relations perspective, are informative summaries of what US government media services are doing and what they hope to achieve. They are useful for the general reader, and they provide a long-term outlook that can assist in dealing with the unexpected. But the longer the time horizon, the more unlikely it is that broad strategies can help with practitioner choices on issues shaped by chance, unexpected contingencies, multiple issues, and what others do. Missing in this document is discussion of a strategy to address a repeat of the chaos that occurred when USAGM’s world turned upside down during the eight months of Michael Pack’s tenure as CEO in the Trump administration.

Geoffrey Wiseman, “Expertise and Politics in Ministries of Foreign Affairs: The Politician-Diplomat Nexus,” in Christian Lequesne, ed., Ministries of Foreign Affairs in the World: Actors of State Diplomacy, (Koninklijke Brill, 2022), 119-149. Wiseman (DePaul University) carries forward his contributions to practitioner-oriented diplomatic studies in this compelling examination of interactions of diplomats and political leaders in ministries of foreign affairs (MFAs). In the context of concerns about faltering democracies and politicization of MFAs, he makes three claims. (1) MFAs (and their embassy networks) are important complicated actors constituted by individuals with mixed backgrounds and complex motives and emotions. (2) Diplomats’ interactions with political leaders are consequential for policy formulation and shaping national identities. (3) MFAs and diplomats have an underappreciated capacity for agency and innovation. He develops these claims in exploration of roles MFAs play as policy messengers, shapers, producers, and resisters. The strengths of this well-written chapter are its clear definitions and concepts, evidence from a broad range of cases in pluralistic and authoritarian countries, an extensive bibliography, and numerous pointers to hard questions and agendas for further research. 

Marie Yovanovitch, Lessons from the Edge: A Memoir, (Mariner Books, 2022). Ambassador Yovanovitch’s memoir has value well beyond her celebrity role in Donald Trump’s first impeachment. It is her absorbing account of navigating the State Department’s bureaucracy, overcoming gender discrimination, and lessons learned, first in management and consular assignments in Somalia and London, and then as a political officer in Russia and Canada, DCM in Ukraine, and ambassador in Kyrgyzstan, Armenia, and Ukraine. The first eight chapters fascinate for her blend of the high politics of bilateral relations and challenges of building a Foreign Service career. We gain insights into the nuts and bolts of embassy life, her tribute to Alison Palmer’s pioneering sex discrimination class action lawsuit, the benefits of student and faculty assignments at the National Defense University, Russian disinformation, the importance of mentoring, her own and by others, and how a “rules follower to the core” coped with corruption and political demands. She is generous with praise for those she admires, discreet in comments on peers, and ready to settle a score or two in egregious cases of gender discrimination. The final ten chapters are devoted to her experiences during the Trump administration. Here her patriotism, courage, and grace under extreme pressure shine through. 

Yovanovitch’s interest in diplomacy’s public dimension turns largely on democratization, rule of law, and free market projects in the civil societies of authoritarian countries. As a self-described introvert, speeches and media contacts are not her comfort zone, but she rose to the occasion repeatedly when required. A single reference to cultural diplomacy (her speech celebrating the Kharkiv-Cincinnati Sister City connection) is included, because it was during her remarks that she first learned of the 9/11 attacks. This is not a book to learn about her views on exchanges, broadcasting, and the roles of PAOs. But it is an extraordinarily useful resource for understanding political risks and patterns of practice of career diplomats in modern diplomacy. 

R. S. Zaharna, “A Humanity-Centered Vision of Soft Power for Public Diplomacy’s Global Mandate,”Journal of Public Diplomacy, Vol. 1, No. 2, 27-48. Zaharna (American University) continues her research on a public diplomacy that goes beyond a competitive state-centric perspective and a “traditional diplomacy of imperialism.” Her goal is to expand a vision of soft power grounded in “humankind’s global heritages and evolutionary capacity for cooperation.” The article combines her argument that public diplomacy has failed the Covid-19 test with a comparative analysis of the soft power ideas of Alexander Vuving and Joseph S. Nye, Jr.  

Recent Items of Interest

“AFSA Foreign Service Reform Priorities,”  April 2022, American Foreign Service Association.  

Sohaela Amiri, “Can Los Angeles Help Kyiv?”  April 11, 2022; Mark Kristmanson, “Can City Diplomacy Help Ukraine? Continuing the Conversation,”  April 22, 2022, CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy.

Simon Anholt, “The Good Country Index: The End of the Selfish State,” and “The Good Country Index: Edition 1.5,” March 29, 2022, Diplomatic Courier. 

Denise Campbell Bauer, “Fostering Franco-American Exchange for Our Shared Future,”  April 5, 2022, Smithsonian Magazine.

“Franklin and Diplomacy,” Conversation moderated by Judy Woodruff with Ken Burns, Condoleezza Rice, and Nicholas Burns, PBS one-hour video; “Benjamin Franklin: A Film by Ken Burns,” May 2022, PBS four-hour documentary. 

“Bill Burns and the Bear,”  April 9, 2022, The Economist.

Morgan Chalfant and Rebecca Beitsch, “Biden’s CIA Head Leads the Charge Against Putin’s Information War,”  March 13, 2022, The Hill.

Geoffrey Cowan, “Our Secret Weapon Against Putin Isn’t So Secret,”  March 28, 2022, Politico.

M. J. Crawford and Keome Rowe, “Invest in the Next Generation: Ideas From the Entry-Level Group at Mission Pakistan,”  March 2022, The Foreign Service Journal.

Renee Earle, “Don’t Leave the Russian People Behind,”  May 2022, American Diplomacy.

“Exploring the Secretary’s Modernization Agenda: A Q&A with Policy Planning Director Salman Ahmed,” March 2022, The Foreign Service Journal.

Marci Falck-Bados, “SIS Global Leadership Dinner, Student Speech,”  May 2022, American University

Nicholas Cull, “Looking for God at the Dubai Expo,”  May 5, 2022, CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy.

Mark Hannah, “Why Is the Wartime Press Corps So Hawkish,”  March 30, 2022, Foreign Policy.

Drew Harwell, “Computer Programmers Are Taking Aim at Russia’s Propaganda Wall,”  March 17, 2022, The Washington Post.

Nikki Hinshaw – Recipient of the 2022 Walter Roberts Public Diplomacy Studies Award,  April 30, 2022, Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication, GWU.

Joe B. Johnson, “New Nonprofit Promotes U.S. Global Engagement: Two Washington-based Organizations Merge,”  April 16, 2022; “PDCA: Strengthening America’s Dialogue With the World,” Public Diplomacy Council of America.

Steve Johnson, “How a Magazine Called ‘Amerika’ Helped Win the Cold War,”  May 15, 2022, Politico. 

Peter Isackson, “Finding a Way to Diss Information,” March 16, 2022; “Try This Game to Evaluate Levels of Disinformation in Times of War,”  March 14, 2022, Fair Observer. 

Thomas Kent, “How to Reach Russian Ears,” March 8, 2022, Center for European Policy Analysis; Evelyn Kent, Quinata Jurecic, and Thomas Kent, “Getting Information Into Russia,” March 24, 2022, The Lawfare Podcast. 

Mark MacCarthy, “Why a Push to Exclude Russian State Media Would Be Problematic for Free Speech and Democracy,”  April 14, 2022, Brookings.

Jan Melissen: Recipient of 2022 ISA Distinguished Scholar Award in Diplomacy Studies, March 28, 2022, University of Leiden. 

Simon Morrison, “Canceling Russian Artists Plays Into Putin’s Hands,”  March 11, 2022, The Washington Post. 

Kiki Skagen Munshi, “Time to Reorient,”  (Letter, p. 11), May 2022, The Foreign Service Journal. 

“President Biden Announces Key Nominees [to the International Broadcasting Advisory Board and US Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy],”  March 11, 2022, The White House.

Thomas Rid, “Why You Haven’t Heard About the Secret Cyberwar in Ukraine,” March 18, 2022, The New York Times;“Thomas Rid on Ukraine and Cyberwar,” March 23, 2022, The Lawfare Podcast.  

Philip Seib, “Why Russia is Losing the Information War,”  May 9, 2022, CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy.

 “Seven-in-Ten Americans Now See Russia as an Enemy: Attitudes Toward NATO Increasingly Positive,”  April 6, 2022, Pew Research Center.

Elizabeth Shackelford, “How to Lead With Diplomacy, and Not Just in Ukraine,”  March 24, 2022, Chicago Tribune. 

Aaron Shaffer, “It’s a Big Day at the State Department for U.S. Cyberdiplomacy,”  April 4, 2022, The Washington Post

Dan Spokojny, “It’s Official: All Foreign Service Officers Must Learn Data,”  March 21, 2022, fp21. 

Ian Thomas, “The Value of Soft Power & Cultural Approaches to International Heritage Protection,”  April 26, 2022, CPD Blog, USC Center on Public Diplomacy.

Vivian S. Walker, “Analysis | ‘Glory to the Heroes’: Ukraine’s War for Narrative Credibility,”  March 17, 2022, The Diplomatic Pouch, Georgetown University. 

“2022 Walter Roberts Congressional Award Given to Sen. Chris Murphy,” March 31, 2022, Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication, GWU. 

Gem From The Past  

Ole Jacob Sending, Vincent Pouliot, and Iver Neumann, “The Future of Diplomacy: Changing Practices, Evolving Relationships,”  International Journal, Vol. 66, No. 3, June 2011, 527-542. About a decade ago, Sending (Norwegian Institute of International Affairs), Pouliot (McGill University), and Neumann (Fridtjof Nansen Institute, Oslo) published a pathbreaking article. Their goal was to locate traditional and nontraditional diplomacy actors in an evolving pattern of social relations. They identified two areas of change: (1) compatibilities and tensions in diplomacy’s evolving relationship between representation and governance, and (2) the territorial-nonterritorial character of relations between diplomatic actors and the constituencies they represent. 

Their article surveys the literature of the day and pays close attention to ways the practice of diplomacy informs theory. They also discuss how nontraditional diplomats make nonterritorial authority claims and how representation is increasingly shaped by governance. As today’s scholars and practitioners turn increasingly to the “societization of diplomacy,” this article continues to resonate. “When all is said and done,” they argue, “we can be certain of one trait that the future of diplomacy will inevitably share with its past: it will remain a key practical grounding of ever-changing configurations of social relations beyond the state.” In assessing the evolution of diplomacy practices, we should keep in mind that “diplomacy is a social form deeply embedded in historically and culturally contingent contexts that produce meanings and politics. 

An archive ofDiplomacy’s  Public Dimension: Books, Articles, Websites  (2002-present) is maintained at George Washington University’s Institute for Public Diplomacy and Global Communication.  Current issues are also posted by the University of Southern California’s Center on Public Diplomacy, and the Public Diplomacy Council of America.