The Limits of Culture: Islam and Foreign Policy

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MIT Press, 2006 - 350 páginas

In recent years, analysts of world affairs have suggested that cultural interests -- ethnicity, religion, and ideology -- play a primary role in patterns of conflict and alliances, and that in the future the "clash of civilizations" will dominate international relations. The Limits of Culture explores the effect of culture on foreign policy, focusing on countries in the geopolitically important Caspian region and paying particular attention to those states that have identified themselves as Islamic republics -- Iran, Taliban Afghanistan, and Pakistan.The contributors to The Limits of Culture find that, contrary to the currently popular view, culture is rarely more important than other factors in shaping the foreign policies of countries in the Caspian region. They find that ruling regimes do not necessarily act according to their own rhetoric. Iran, for example, can conduct policies that contradict the official state ideology without suffering domestic retribution. Also, countries frequently align with one another when they do not share religious beliefs or cultural heritage. For example, Christian Armenia cooperates on trade and security with non-Christian Iran. Cultural identities, the contributors find, are flexible enough to enable states to pursue a wide range of policies that are consistent with their material interests. As the essays in The Limits of Culture make clear, the emerging foreign policies of the Caspian states present a significant challenge to the culturalist argument.

 

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Índice

Introduction The Limits of Culture
1
Culture and Foreign Politics
27
Beyond Blood and Belief Culture and Foreign Policy Conduct
65
History and Foreign Policy From Constructed Identities to Ancient Hatreds East of the Caspian
83
Culture and Alliances US Portrayals of Saudi Arabia Azerbaijan and Kazakhstan Before and After September 11 2001
111
Congress Constituencies and US Foreign Policy in the Caspian
167
Domestic Politics Bureaucratic Strategies and Culture in Central Asia
193
The Islamic Republic of Iran Is It Really?
219
Civilizational Identity and Foreign Policy The Case of Iran
241
Taliban Afghanistan A True Islamic State?
263
Pakistans Foreign Policy Islamic or Pragmatic?
291
Conclusion
325
About the Authors
337
Index
341
About the Belfer Center for Science and International Affairs
354
Direitos de autor

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Acerca do autor (2006)

Brenda Shaffer is Research Director of the Caspian Studies Program at Harvard University. Sheis the author of Borders and Brethren: Iran and the Challenge of AzerbaijaniIdentity (MIT Press, 2002).

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