Religion and Foreign Policy Making in the USA, India and Iran: towards a research agenda
Jeffrey Haynes
Third World Quarterly, 2008, vol. 29, issue 1, 143-165
Abstract:
This article is concerned with religious soft power in foreign policy making through a focus on the foreign policies of the USA, India and Iran. It suggests that, if religious actors ‘get the ear’ of key foreign policy makers because of their shared religious beliefs, the former may become able to influence foreign policy outcomes through the exercise of religious soft power. In relation to the above-mentioned countries, the article proposes that several named religious actors do significantly influence foreign policy through such a strategy. It also notes that such influence is apparent not only when key policy makers share religious values, norms and beliefs but also when policy makers accept that foreign policy should be informed by them.
Date: 2008
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DOI: 10.1080/01436590701739668
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