Showing posts with label Public. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Public. Show all posts

Friday, January 13, 2012

A Future for Public Diplomacy?

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In a recent article on The Mark, I demonstrated that the paradigm for the delivery of Canadian international policy shifted fundamentally during the 1980s and ’90s. Over the course of those years, there was a deliberate move away from an emphasis on traditional, state-to-state interaction, and toward public diplomacy (PD). PD is a form of international political exchange that features diplomats communicating directly with foreign populations and cultivating partnerships with civil-society actors – NGOs, businesspeople, journalists, and academics. As I discussed before, the PD formula, in conjunction with the right combination of political will and bureaucratic skill, can produce impressive results, especially if directed towards projects with broad popular and media appeal, such as a land-mine ban or efforts to improve the lot of children in conflict zones.

Looking back, it can be seen that Canadian PD reached its apogee during Lloyd Axworthy’s years as foreign minister (1996-2000). At a time of severe government-wide cost-cutting, Canada fundamentally downsized its international ambitions, but that exercise was not translated into a retreat from the field. To be sure, the large-scale, long-range, potentially world-changing projects of the post-war decades – poverty eradication, conflict resolution, and global environmental conservation – were gone. In their place, Canadian officials proposed a series of special projects – such as curbs on the trading of “blood” diamonds and small arms – designed for implementation within media-friendly diplomatic niches. They did not always succeed, but each initiative featured a defined start and finish. Upon completion, the foreign minister could simply call a press conference, declare victory, and move on.

Axworthy very quickly learned how the use of soft power could make a virtue of necessity. Conventional diplomacy was still necessary, but it was no longer sufficient when it came to influencing foreign governments. That influence was best brought to bear through their publics, and through international public opinion, especially when compulsion was not an option and democratization had expanded the scope for exercising influence indirectly.


Related: Canadian Public Diplomacy, Then and Now


The requirements associated with this burst of activism imposed significant costs upon the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade’s (DFAIT) staff, already struggling under the burden of increased demands and reduced resources. Moreover, some strategic opportunities were missed. In 1996-97, for instance, the department’s Communications Bureau proposed the launch of an ambitious project that would have vaulted Canada into the digital age by establishing an integrated global presence based upon satellite broadcasting, the internet, public diplomacy, international education, and branding. In the end, however, at a time of diminishing capacity across government, the project, titled the Canadian International Information Strategy, lost out in Cabinet to the campaign to ban land mines (later christened the “Ottawa Process”). Canada might today be more effective and influential in the world had circumstances – particularly timing and the economic environment – been more propitious during that critical period.

In bureaucracy, there is often a lag between action and reflection. The Axworthy years were so frenetic that there was little time to think through the full implications of the program in terms of the design, structure, and operations of the foreign ministry. As a result, generic interest in PD within the DFAIT apparatus actually peaked following Axworthy’s departure. For the first five years of the new century, significant efforts were made to weave PD into the department’s modus operandi. A new PD secretariat was established in Washington to co-ordinate advocacy activities in the United States. The idea of “mainstreaming public diplomacy” was central to a comprehensive reform package entitled Building a 21st Century Foreign Ministry, or FAC21, which DFAIT’s deputy ministers launched in 2004. When Jean Chrétien stepped down from his role as prime minister the same year, the new leader, Paul Martin, commissioned a comprehensive international policy review. In the final, five-volume report, “A Role of Pride and Influence in the World,” PD was highlighted as “the new diplomacy.” Neither initiative survived the defeat of the Liberal government a few years later.

Although it has been scarcely more than a decade since Axworthy left office, the years of Canadian public-diplomatic activism now seem long ago. Ironically, despite the many practical successes and, later, some focused internal interest, PD never received the extent of budgetary support that might have been anticipated. This is doubly curious because although Axworthy’s Liberal successors, John Manley, Bill Graham, and Pierre Pettigrew, did not share his enthusiasm for human security, they did seem to buy into PD. Manley mandated a public-diplomacy working group within the secretariat conducting his – albeit short-lived – Foreign Policy Update in 2001, and, beginning in 2003, Graham used the interactive potential of the internet to reach out to Canadians with his Foreign Policy Dialogue. But political interest in undertaking concrete diplomatic initiatives had waned well before the January 2006 election of a Conservative minority government. Almost immediately, the previous administration’s policy review was shelved, government communications were centralized and placed under strict control, and DFAIT officials were gagged.

Canadian public diplomacy, already in decline and lethally tainted by its association with the outgoing Liberal government, effectively disappeared. Memories of independent Canadian leadership on global issues are receding, and the drift towards continental integration continues.


Related: Diplomacy, Journalism, and the New Media


In May 2011, the Conservative party returned with a majority, and John Baird, a prominent and influential Tory insider, was named foreign minister. Baird speaks of the need for a “tough” foreign policy, and the overall emphasis favours the military over diplomacy and development assistance. Yet there are stirrings within DFAIT of a possible PD renewal. A modest experiment has been launched, allowing several of Canada’s European ambassadors to engage foreign audiences using social-media platforms such as Twitter and Facebook, and this enterprise may eventually be expanded to include the participation of all Canadian missions.

That said, even under a best-case scenario Canada will still be trailing most of its diplomatic competition, both within the OECD and beyond. At this juncture, it would take a full-court press – and significant resources – to restore what has been lost. Unless and until DFAIT regains the full confidence, trust, and respect of its political masters, and is once again called upon to perform, any return to the halcyon days of Canadian PD activism seems unlikely.

Photo courtesy of Reuters.

Sunday, January 8, 2012

Canadian Public Diplomacy, Then and Now


I have recently been reviewing Diplomacy in the Digital Age, a collection of essays prepared in honour of Allan Gotlieb, a former Undersecretary of State for External Affairs and Canada’s ambassador in Washington from 1981-89. It is an absorbing anthology, and contains valuable entries, penned, in some instances, by those who worked with Gotlieb during his time in the U.S. Quite apart from eliciting specific reactions to the content of the volume, reading it has also spurred me to reflect on the larger issue of what became of Canada’s once considerable contribution to the study and practice of public diplomacy (PD).
The Government of Canada was, until fairly recently, regarded as somewhat of a PD pioneer. That reputation would now be difficult to sustain. Indeed, I have come to the rather stark realization that, whatever this country may at one time have achieved by way of advancing its interests through PD, those days are now long gone.
In official and political circles in Ottawa today, little or nothing is heard of PD. The practice, and even the use of the term, has been discouraged within the Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade (DFAIT), and the function has been almost completely de-resourced.



Related: Diplomacy, Journalism, and the New Media


Hence, the questions must be put: What, exactly, did Canada manage to achieve in terms of PD outcomes over the past several decades? Why has PD fallen from grace? And, finally, can any lessons of broader relevance be adduced?
Canadian academics, and several serving and former diplomats, have, over time, been active in the conceptualization and analysis of PD. Publications such as Allan Gotlieb’s I'll Be With You in a Minute, Mr. Ambassador, Gordon Smith’s Virtual Diplomacy, Rob McRae and Don Hubert’s Human Security and the New Diplomacy, Andy Cooper’s Celebrity Diplomacy, Evan Potter’s Branding Canada, and perhaps even my own Guerrilla Diplomacy have been seen by some as breaking new ground in the field.
In addition to these intellectual contributions, the Canadian foreign ministry has been deeply involved in the practical application of PD. Beginning in the 1980s, most of Canada’s major diplomatic undertakings – the 1981 Cancun Summit on North-South relations, former prime minister Pierre Trudeau’s 1984 peace crusade, the acid-rain and free-trade pacts with the U.S., the 1987 Montreal Protocol on ozone-layer depletion, and the Commonwealth campaign to end apartheid in southern Africa – included a significant PD component. Even if not labelled as public diplomacy at the time, a willingness to connect directly with foreign populations, the strategic use of the media, and tactics such as forging partnerships with business and civil society were integral to each of these initiatives.
In the early 1990s, and quite explicitly so by the second half of the decade, PD moved even closer to the centre of Canadian international policy. In the organization and delivery of the 1992 Rio Summit on Environment and Development, throughout the so-called “fish war” with Spain in 1994, and particularly during Lloyd Axworthy’s four-year tenure as foreign minister (1996-2000), PD, and the related notion of “soft power,” were the order of the day.



Related: Hard Power Vs. Soft Power


Charged with implementing the severe expenditure reductions associated with the government-wide Program Review exercise of the mid-1990s, Axworthy must have concluded that the page had to be turned on old ways, and that global order projects would accordingly have to be set aside. But he was clearly not prepared to accept that this meant inaction. To the contrary, he demanded that DFAIT officials identify innovative ways for Canada to “make a difference.” He was determined to find opportunity in adversity, even if faced with opposition from the U.S. and other major powers, and, indeed, from many Canadians.
DFAIT staff rose to the challenge, and came forth with a series of proposals. In the campaigns leading to the signature of the Treaty Banning Land Mines in 1997 and the establishment of the International Criminal Court in 1998, Axworthy attained his objectives by nurturing partnerships with international civil society and similarly inclined countries. He also reached out in an unprecedented fashion to the journalists, the academic community, and NGOs at home, mainly through the creation of the Canadian Centre for Foreign Policy Development and the Public Diplomacy Fund at DFAIT.
The same approach, in varying degrees, was seen in initiatives intended to limit the spread of small arms, to underscore the plight of children in war zones and curb the use of child soldiers, and to restrict the sale of “conflict diamonds” through the launch of the Kimberly Process. Canada also sponsored the International Commission on Intervention and State Sovereignty, whose final report, “The Responsibility to Protect,” though initially overtaken by the events of 9/11, resurfaced and was adopted in principle at the UN Millennium Summit in September 2005.
Taken together, Axworthy’s achievements were artfully – and, in part, retrospectively – packaged by officials into a remarkably coherent program, which came to be known as the Human Security Agenda. Although that policy direction did not survive for long following the minister’s departure from office, the record of activity in the second half of the 1990s stands nonetheless as an enduring testament to the power and potential of Canadian PD. It was a high point that has not been revisited since. To a significant extent, I would suggest that, whatever remains, Canada’s positive international reputation – its brand – still relies on these, and earlier accomplishments.
Photo courtesy of Reuters.