Introduction. The long international history of women and diplomacy
Access status:
Open Access
Type
Book chapterAuthor/s
Sluga, GlendaAbstract
It is a curious fact of the contemporary world that more women are appointed to
political roles as diplomats, and even to leading foreign affairs portfolios – across the
ideological divides of liberalism and conservatism – than almost any other ministerial
office. Here we might ...
See moreIt is a curious fact of the contemporary world that more women are appointed to political roles as diplomats, and even to leading foreign affairs portfolios – across the ideological divides of liberalism and conservatism – than almost any other ministerial office. Here we might think of, most recently, Hilary Clinton (United States), Federica Mogherini (Italy) or Catherine Ashton (EU). The list would be much longer if we looked outside of the Western countries that are the focus of this volume. These essays reveal that this accommodation of women in international politics is not simply an anomalous consequence of modernity. It is contiguous with practices since the origins of diplomacy, in which women acted as agents of cross-state and cross-cultural information-gathering, alliance-building and networking, and as political negotiators, even if this was sometimes controversial.
See less
See moreIt is a curious fact of the contemporary world that more women are appointed to political roles as diplomats, and even to leading foreign affairs portfolios – across the ideological divides of liberalism and conservatism – than almost any other ministerial office. Here we might think of, most recently, Hilary Clinton (United States), Federica Mogherini (Italy) or Catherine Ashton (EU). The list would be much longer if we looked outside of the Western countries that are the focus of this volume. These essays reveal that this accommodation of women in international politics is not simply an anomalous consequence of modernity. It is contiguous with practices since the origins of diplomacy, in which women acted as agents of cross-state and cross-cultural information-gathering, alliance-building and networking, and as political negotiators, even if this was sometimes controversial.
See less
Date
2015Source title
Women, Diplomacy And International Politics Since 1500 in 2015Publisher
RoutledgeFunding information
ARC FL130100174Licence
Creative Commons Attribution-NonCommercial-NoDerivatives 3.0Rights statement
This is an Accepted Manuscript of a book chapter published by Routledge in Glenda Sluga and Carolyn James, eds., Women, Diplomacy And International Politics Since 1500 in 2015 , available online: https://www.routledge.com/Women-Diplomacy-and-International-Politics-since-1500/Sluga-James/p/book/9780415714655Faculty/School
Faculty of Arts and Social SciencesDepartment, Discipline or Centre
Department of HistoryShare