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    The Diplomacy of Proximity and Specialness: Enhancing Canada’s Representation in the United States.

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    Publication date
    2006
    Author
    Hocking, B.
    Lee, Donna
    Keyword
    Diplomatic representation, Distance-proximity, Special relationships, Canada and the United States, Enhanced Representation Initiative (ERI), Foreign Affairs Canada, Adapting modes of representation
    Peer-Reviewed
    n/a
    
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    Abstract
    Diplomatic representation, both as a concept and in terms of its structures and processes, does not receive the attention that it deserves. Th is is surprising given that it forms a central concern for both analysts and practitioners of diplomacy, with the latter confronting multiple challenges in adapting modes of representation to changes in their international and domestic political environments. One facet of this can be identifi ed in responses to factors that have assumed a signifi cant place in the development of diplomacy — namely distance and proximity. To the growth of proximity in both spatial and issue-oriented terms, the challenge of the ‘special relationship’ is added in specifi c contexts. Both factors come together in the case of Canada’s attempts to manage its policies towards the United States. Here, strategies have moved through distinct phases responding to domestic and international changes. Th e latest phase, which is associated with substantial rethinking of the role and structure of Foreign Aff airs Canada, assumes the form of what has been labelled the Enhanced Representation Initiative (ERI). Th e ERI is interesting not only in the Canadian-US context, but because it reveals more general problems for governments seeking to manage the pressures of proximity and a growing number of relationships that assume aspects of ‘specialness.
    URI
    http://hdl.handle.net/10454/7217
    Version
    not applicable paper
    Citation
    Hocking B and Lee D (2006) The Diplomacy of Proximity and Specialness: Enhancing Canada’s Representation in the United States. The Hague Journal of Diplomacy 1: 29-52
    Link to publisher’s version
    http://dx.doi.org/0.1163/187119006X101889
    Type
    Article
    Collections
    Social Sciences Publications

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