Regional cultural cooperation
Domenico Valenza and
Nahuel Oddone
Chapter 13 in Handbook of Regional Cooperation and Integration, 2024, pp 289-310 from Edward Elgar Publishing
Abstract:
This chapter analyses the role of cultural policies in regional organisations. Against essentialist understandings of culture in international relations, it conceives regional organisations as diversity regimes and cultural policies as tools that help organise cultural diversity in regional organisations. More precisely, the chapter explores through comparative discourse analysis cultural policies in four regional organisations: the European Union (EU); the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS); the Common Market of the South (MERCOSUR); and the Andean Community (CAN). Our findings show that nativist conceptions of culture can already appear in the early integration process, as the case of the CIS and the CAN show, but this is not a strict determinant for successful cooperation. At the other end of the spectrum, the EU and MERCOSUR stand out as examples where the early stages of the integration processes lacked a proper cultural dimension. However, in line with their diversity-management role, both regional organisations eventually attempted to stabilise cultures in order to gain domestic legitimation. In the case of the EU, from a pluralist approach and a loosely defined cultural persona, culture has become a full-fledged legal and policy area of work. Despite its young age, discourses of normalisation on democratic culture have also increasingly shaped MERCOSUR. Building on a new approach to cultural diversity in regional organisations, this chapter hopes to challenge existing understandings of cultures as bounded systems of meanings and, in doing so, to provide an alternative to Huntingtonian depictions of the world with neat cultural civilisations and inevitable clashes.
Keywords: Economics and Finance; Geography; Politics and Public Policy Urban and Regional Studies (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2024
References: Add references at CitEc
Citations:
Downloads: (external link)
https://www.elgaronline.com/doi/10.4337/9781800373747.00021 (application/pdf)
Our link check indicates that this URL is bad, the error code is: 503 Service Temporarily Unavailable
Related works:
This item may be available elsewhere in EconPapers: Search for items with the same title.
Export reference: BibTeX
RIS (EndNote, ProCite, RefMan)
HTML/Text
Persistent link: https://EconPapers.repec.org/RePEc:elg:eechap:20100_13
Ordering information: This item can be ordered from
http://www.e-elgar.com
Access Statistics for this chapter
More chapters in Chapters from Edward Elgar Publishing
Bibliographic data for series maintained by Darrel McCalla ().