2008 - Cowan and Cull
2008 - Cowan and Cull
2008 - Cowan and Cull
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Preface
Wars bring newWorld
lic notice. words and phrases
War I taught the world to pub
camouflage, World War II brought Blitzkrieg
and Kamikaze, while the cold war gave us con
tainment and deterrence. The "War on Terror,"
which began in the wake of September 11,
2001, has also brought new prominence to a
number of words and phrases, one of which,
Public public diplomacy?meaning an international
actors attempt to advance the ends of policy by
engaging with foreign publics?is the subject
Diplomacy in a of this collection. Such new words typically
merely attach a new name to an old concept. In
Changing World the case of public diplomacy, the concept covers
a number of well-established?even ancient?
activities that have been in use for many years.
The term public diplomacy is a product of
American activity in the middle years of the
By cold war. In 1965, Edmund Gullion, a retired
GEOFFREY COWAN
and diplomat who became dean of diplomacy at
Tufts University, unveiled the term with the
NICHOLAS J. CULL launch of the Edward R. Murrow Center for
Public Diplomacy. But the U.S. government
had been engaged in activities associated with
the term for a generation prior. Seventeen
years had passed since President Harry Truman
signed legislation authorizing massive peace
time expenditures on international informa
tion programs, twelve years had passed since
President Dwight Eisenhower created the
United States Information Agency (USIA) to
provide a single administrative home for such
work, and arguably public diplomacy has been
part of America s wartime activity as far back as
the Revolutionary War. Gullion s intent in the
mid-1960s was in large part to aid Americas
practice of international information and
exchange by liberating it from the taint of the
dominant term for such work in previous
decades: propaganda. USIA staffers welcomed
a phrase that spoke to their role as diplomats
rather than as advertising or public relations
DOI: 10.1177/0002716207312143
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PREFACE 7
agents. Moreover, the logic of public diplomacy was easily translated int
argument for giving the USIA dominion over all aspects of U.S. official eng
ments with foreign publics, including the independently minded Voic
America radio operations and the Fulbright programs, which their namesak
Senator J. William Fulbright, had embedded in the State Department. The t
gathered use gradually in official and legislative circles. Representative Dant
Fascell of Florida was especially taken with it. In 1978 the old Advisor
Commissions for Information and Culture amalgamated into a single U
Advisory Commission on Public Diplomacy. The 1980s lifted both usage of t
term and budgets even further as the indefatigable Charles Z. Wick took over
USIA and the Reagan administration treated information services as a vital t
to be used in confronting the Soviet Union.
The political changes of 1989 and after played out with bitter irony
Americas public diplomats. For many governments around the world, the sp
tacle of the fall of the Berlin Wall spurred a new interest in international co
munication as a tool or set of tools to be used more effectively in diplomacy.
vocabulary and functions of public diplomacy also grew as a vital componen
the work of nation-states and other international actors. Public diplomacy
vided a convenient framework for thinking about the impact of the "commun
tions revolution" on the practice of foreign policy. Yet at the same t
conservative American legislators, eager for a "peace dividend," tighten
financial grip on the USIA and, aided by leading members of the administra
of President Bill Clinton, eventually affected its merger into the Department
State in 1999. In the wake of 9/11, as America asked, "Why do they hate us?"
opinion polls revealed mounting levels of anti-Americanism, even casual rea
of the American press became suddenly familiar with the phrase public dip
macy and with the hard-pressed cast that labored to turn back the tide of n
tive international opinion toward the United States. Fairly or not, Presiden
George W. Bush s three under secretaries of state for public diplomacy and
lic affairs?Charlotte Beers, Margaret Tutwiler, and Karen Hughes?all m
aged to attract a wide range of critics. All left office prematurely.
While public diplomacy has been an important force in international relatio
for decades, it has only recently begun to attract serious academic attention. T
collection seeks to explain the concept of public diplomacy, to put it into an
demic framework, and to examine it as an international phenomenon an
important component of statecraft. Because it has been neglected in academ
circles, scholarship around public diplomacy has until recently been domina
by practitioners, frequently with an institutional axe to grind. Many of the
tributors here?including coeditor Geoffrey Cowan, Joseph Nye, Bruce Grego
Nancy Snow, and Ernest Wilson?bring practitioner experiences to their cont
butions, but they write from the perspective of academic disciplines. Altho
this collection is grounded in American scholarship, the concept of public dip
macy is truly international, a function and concern of all nations and of mul
tional organizations such as the European Union and United Nations. Reflect
the international range of scholarship in the field, there are a number of pie
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8 THE ANNALS OF THE AMERICAN ACADEMY
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