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To be a diplomat abroad: Diplomatic practice at embassies

This article shows that the simultaneous management of three different social roles - knowledge producer, representative of a government, and bureaucrat - defines the everyday work and practice of contemporary diplomats posted at embassies. This argument rests on an analysis of information gathering...

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Published in:Cooperation and conflict 2015-09, Vol.50 (3), p.385-401
Main Author: Cornut, Jérémie
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Language:English
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description This article shows that the simultaneous management of three different social roles - knowledge producer, representative of a government, and bureaucrat - defines the everyday work and practice of contemporary diplomats posted at embassies. This argument rests on an analysis of information gathering in Western embassies before, during and after the eighteen days of the revolt that ousted Egyptian President Hosni Mubarak in 2011. I first identify various practices influencing diplomatic knowledge and prompting the production of particular interpretations of the revolt in Egypt. I then analyze how actors manage multiple positions and dispositions within overlapping social fields. This point illustrates what practice theorists mean when they assert that agents are always speaking from a position. Overall, the article unravels what being a diplomat posted abroad actually consists of in practice, complementing existing studies on the diplomatic mode of knowledge production. I provide insights on the interactions between diplomats and non-state actors and show that diplomats' social skills and analytic competence constantly require and support each other.
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source JSTOR Archival Journals and Primary Sources Collection【Remote access available】; Worldwide Political Science Abstracts; SAGE
subjects Bureaucracy
Diplomacy
Diplomats
Embassies
Mubarak, Hosni
Non-state actors
Presidents
Production
Skills
title To be a diplomat abroad: Diplomatic practice at embassies
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