Minorities as secondary foreign policy agents in peace-building and reconciliation? The case of Denmark and Germany

Author (Person)
Series Title
Series Details Vol.27, No.3, July 2017, p239-259
Publication Date July 2017
ISSN 1359-7566
Content Type

This article forms part of a Special Issue of this journal: Secondary Foreign policy – local international relations: can local cross border cooperation function as a tool to peace-building and reconciliation in border regions?

Abstract:

The border between Germany and Denmark is a result of the Versailles Peace Treaty implemented after the First World War. Drawn after a plebiscite in 1920, it was challenged until at least the 1950s by key actors within the respective national minorities on either side of the border and their nationalist supporters.

Since the millennium, though, a narrative of reconciliation and cooperation has taken over, where national minorities’ institutions have taken in a central role of political bridge-building and de-bordering. The article will analyse the role of the German and Danish national minorities as secondary foreign policy agents in Danish–German relations in general and regional cross-border cooperation in particular.

I argue that there is still a gap between rhetorics of involvement and factual governance, and that secondary foreign policy impact is heavily dependent on institutional capacity.

Source Link http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/13597566.2017.1350651
Subject Categories
Countries / Regions