Home > Research > Publications & Outputs > Foreign Policy in a ‘Networked World’

Links

Text available via DOI:

View graph of relations

Foreign Policy in a ‘Networked World’: Exploring Britain’s Response to the Arab Uprisings

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Published

Standard

Foreign Policy in a ‘Networked World’: Exploring Britain’s Response to the Arab Uprisings. / Garnett, Mark; Mabon, Simon.
ICCLS 2018: Chaos, Complexity and Leadership 2018 . ed. / Şefika Şule ERÇETİN; Şuay Nilhan AÇIKALIN. Cham: Springer, 2020. p. 1-19 (Springer Proceedings in Complexity).

Research output: Contribution in Book/Report/Proceedings - With ISBN/ISSNConference contribution/Paperpeer-review

Harvard

Garnett, M & Mabon, S 2020, Foreign Policy in a ‘Networked World’: Exploring Britain’s Response to the Arab Uprisings. in ŞŞ ERÇETİN & ŞN AÇIKALIN (eds), ICCLS 2018: Chaos, Complexity and Leadership 2018 . Springer Proceedings in Complexity, Springer, Cham, pp. 1-19, 6th International Symposium on Chaos, Complexity and Leadership, ICCLS 2018, Ankara, Turkey, 11/12/18. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-27672-0_1

APA

Garnett, M., & Mabon, S. (2020). Foreign Policy in a ‘Networked World’: Exploring Britain’s Response to the Arab Uprisings. In Ş. Ş. ERÇETİN, & Ş. N. AÇIKALIN (Eds.), ICCLS 2018: Chaos, Complexity and Leadership 2018 (pp. 1-19). (Springer Proceedings in Complexity). Springer. https://doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-27672-0_1

Vancouver

Garnett M, Mabon S. Foreign Policy in a ‘Networked World’: Exploring Britain’s Response to the Arab Uprisings. In ERÇETİN ŞŞ, AÇIKALIN ŞN, editors, ICCLS 2018: Chaos, Complexity and Leadership 2018 . Cham: Springer. 2020. p. 1-19. (Springer Proceedings in Complexity). doi: 10.1007/978-3-030-27672-0_1

Author

Garnett, Mark ; Mabon, Simon. / Foreign Policy in a ‘Networked World’ : Exploring Britain’s Response to the Arab Uprisings. ICCLS 2018: Chaos, Complexity and Leadership 2018 . editor / Şefika Şule ERÇETİN ; Şuay Nilhan AÇIKALIN. Cham : Springer, 2020. pp. 1-19 (Springer Proceedings in Complexity).

Bibtex

@inproceedings{dfb64e86434a4445acbcb6394c41c4cc,
title = "Foreign Policy in a {\textquoteleft}Networked World{\textquoteright}: Exploring Britain{\textquoteright}s Response to the Arab Uprisings",
abstract = "This chapter uses the concept of the networked world to engage with British foreign policy after the Arab Uprisings. Many have accused London of conducting a contradictory foreign policy, underpinned by hypocritical claims about supporting democracy and the rule of law, yet when the opportunity to do this emerged, it appeared that Britain was much more concerned with maintaining the stability of allies, seemingly whatever the political – and human – cost. In Bahrain, Britain maintained support for its long-standing ally, the Al Khalifa, despite egregious human rights violations, whilst in Libya, support was provided to opposition groups, seemingly without consideration of the long-term implications. Despite this apparent contradiction and suggestion of double-standards, we argue that there is a degree of coherence within British strategy. In this chapter, we argue that to understand the trajectory of British foreign policy at this time, we need to consider the concept of the networked world, which featured prominently within the foreign policy agenda of the coalition government.We begin by considering this concept of the networked world, placing it within the context of a Conservative-led coalition, which shaped the character of the network.We then turn to a consideration of the cases of Bahrain and Libya, which provide rich scope for analysis of contrasting responses to the popular protests of the Arab Uprisings.",
keywords = "Arab uprisings, Britain{\textquoteright}s response, Foreign policy, Networked world",
author = "Mark Garnett and Simon Mabon",
year = "2020",
month = jan,
day = "17",
doi = "10.1007/978-3-030-27672-0_1",
language = "English",
isbn = "9783030276713",
series = "Springer Proceedings in Complexity",
publisher = "Springer",
pages = "1--19",
editor = "ER{\c C}ETİN, {{\c S}efika {\c S}ule } and A{\c C}IKALIN, {{\c S}uay Nilhan}",
booktitle = "ICCLS 2018",
note = "6th International Symposium on Chaos, Complexity and Leadership, ICCLS 2018 ; Conference date: 11-12-2018 Through 12-12-2018",

}

RIS

TY - GEN

T1 - Foreign Policy in a ‘Networked World’

T2 - 6th International Symposium on Chaos, Complexity and Leadership, ICCLS 2018

AU - Garnett, Mark

AU - Mabon, Simon

PY - 2020/1/17

Y1 - 2020/1/17

N2 - This chapter uses the concept of the networked world to engage with British foreign policy after the Arab Uprisings. Many have accused London of conducting a contradictory foreign policy, underpinned by hypocritical claims about supporting democracy and the rule of law, yet when the opportunity to do this emerged, it appeared that Britain was much more concerned with maintaining the stability of allies, seemingly whatever the political – and human – cost. In Bahrain, Britain maintained support for its long-standing ally, the Al Khalifa, despite egregious human rights violations, whilst in Libya, support was provided to opposition groups, seemingly without consideration of the long-term implications. Despite this apparent contradiction and suggestion of double-standards, we argue that there is a degree of coherence within British strategy. In this chapter, we argue that to understand the trajectory of British foreign policy at this time, we need to consider the concept of the networked world, which featured prominently within the foreign policy agenda of the coalition government.We begin by considering this concept of the networked world, placing it within the context of a Conservative-led coalition, which shaped the character of the network.We then turn to a consideration of the cases of Bahrain and Libya, which provide rich scope for analysis of contrasting responses to the popular protests of the Arab Uprisings.

AB - This chapter uses the concept of the networked world to engage with British foreign policy after the Arab Uprisings. Many have accused London of conducting a contradictory foreign policy, underpinned by hypocritical claims about supporting democracy and the rule of law, yet when the opportunity to do this emerged, it appeared that Britain was much more concerned with maintaining the stability of allies, seemingly whatever the political – and human – cost. In Bahrain, Britain maintained support for its long-standing ally, the Al Khalifa, despite egregious human rights violations, whilst in Libya, support was provided to opposition groups, seemingly without consideration of the long-term implications. Despite this apparent contradiction and suggestion of double-standards, we argue that there is a degree of coherence within British strategy. In this chapter, we argue that to understand the trajectory of British foreign policy at this time, we need to consider the concept of the networked world, which featured prominently within the foreign policy agenda of the coalition government.We begin by considering this concept of the networked world, placing it within the context of a Conservative-led coalition, which shaped the character of the network.We then turn to a consideration of the cases of Bahrain and Libya, which provide rich scope for analysis of contrasting responses to the popular protests of the Arab Uprisings.

KW - Arab uprisings

KW - Britain’s response

KW - Foreign policy

KW - Networked world

U2 - 10.1007/978-3-030-27672-0_1

DO - 10.1007/978-3-030-27672-0_1

M3 - Conference contribution/Paper

AN - SCOPUS:85134602391

SN - 9783030276713

T3 - Springer Proceedings in Complexity

SP - 1

EP - 19

BT - ICCLS 2018

A2 - ERÇETİN, Şefika Şule

A2 - AÇIKALIN, Şuay Nilhan

PB - Springer

CY - Cham

Y2 - 11 December 2018 through 12 December 2018

ER -