Blended Diplomacy: The Entanglement and Contestation of Digital Technologies in Everyday Diplomatic Practice

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Standard

Blended Diplomacy : The Entanglement and Contestation of Digital Technologies in Everyday Diplomatic Practice. / Adler-Nissen, Rebecca; Eggeling, Kristin Anabel.

I: European Journal of International Relations, Bind 28, Nr. 3, 2022, s. 640-666.

Publikation: Bidrag til tidsskriftTidsskriftartikelForskningfagfællebedømt

Harvard

Adler-Nissen, R & Eggeling, KA 2022, 'Blended Diplomacy: The Entanglement and Contestation of Digital Technologies in Everyday Diplomatic Practice', European Journal of International Relations, bind 28, nr. 3, s. 640-666. https://doi.org/10.1177/13540661221107837

APA

Adler-Nissen, R., & Eggeling, K. A. (2022). Blended Diplomacy: The Entanglement and Contestation of Digital Technologies in Everyday Diplomatic Practice. European Journal of International Relations, 28(3), 640-666. https://doi.org/10.1177/13540661221107837

Vancouver

Adler-Nissen R, Eggeling KA. Blended Diplomacy: The Entanglement and Contestation of Digital Technologies in Everyday Diplomatic Practice. European Journal of International Relations. 2022;28(3):640-666. https://doi.org/10.1177/13540661221107837

Author

Adler-Nissen, Rebecca ; Eggeling, Kristin Anabel. / Blended Diplomacy : The Entanglement and Contestation of Digital Technologies in Everyday Diplomatic Practice. I: European Journal of International Relations. 2022 ; Bind 28, Nr. 3. s. 640-666.

Bibtex

@article{14f6d769ce264216a77c2eb656145c23,
title = "Blended Diplomacy: The Entanglement and Contestation of Digital Technologies in Everyday Diplomatic Practice",
abstract = "This article develops a new theoretical approach to digitalisation in diplomacy, resituating conventional understandings of the relationship between diplomacy and technological transformation. Challenging the conception that {\textquoteleft}traditional{\textquoteright} diplomacy is being supplemented or challenged by new forms of {\textquoteleft}digital diplomacy{\textquoteright}, we show how the ubiquity of digital devices and technologies makes disentangling analogue from digital diplomatic practices practically impossible today. The argument is developed through ethnographic observations of everyday diplomatic work in the European Union (EU) multilateral setting in Brussels as well as interviews with ambassadors, attach{\'e}s, seconded diplomats, spokespersons and interpreters. To understand the place of digital technologies in diplomatic work, we develop the concept of blended diplomacy by which we mean the dual process of the entanglement of technical and social doings and the contestation regarding how this entanglement impacts professional diplomatic imaginaries and relations. Drawing on insights from practice theory and the sociology of science, technology and professions, we show how diplomatic actors demarcate their professional territory and protect their positions through boundary work. They draw horizontal boundaries between what they see as {\textquoteleft}real{\textquoteright} diplomatic work and distractions and vertical boundaries between themselves and other diplomatic actors, ranking people around status and skills. Overall, digital technologies are implicated in deeper struggles regarding what it means to be a diplomat. A focus on the blended character of diplomatic practice opens new avenues for research on how digitalisation, in contradictory and uneven ways, shapes norms, identities, and social relations and how it – through reflexivity, anxieties and contestation – may shape international politics.",
author = "Rebecca Adler-Nissen and Eggeling, {Kristin Anabel}",
year = "2022",
doi = "10.1177/13540661221107837",
language = "English",
volume = "28",
pages = "640--666",
journal = "European Journal of International Relations",
issn = "1354-0661",
publisher = "SAGE Publications",
number = "3",

}

RIS

TY - JOUR

T1 - Blended Diplomacy

T2 - The Entanglement and Contestation of Digital Technologies in Everyday Diplomatic Practice

AU - Adler-Nissen, Rebecca

AU - Eggeling, Kristin Anabel

PY - 2022

Y1 - 2022

N2 - This article develops a new theoretical approach to digitalisation in diplomacy, resituating conventional understandings of the relationship between diplomacy and technological transformation. Challenging the conception that ‘traditional’ diplomacy is being supplemented or challenged by new forms of ‘digital diplomacy’, we show how the ubiquity of digital devices and technologies makes disentangling analogue from digital diplomatic practices practically impossible today. The argument is developed through ethnographic observations of everyday diplomatic work in the European Union (EU) multilateral setting in Brussels as well as interviews with ambassadors, attachés, seconded diplomats, spokespersons and interpreters. To understand the place of digital technologies in diplomatic work, we develop the concept of blended diplomacy by which we mean the dual process of the entanglement of technical and social doings and the contestation regarding how this entanglement impacts professional diplomatic imaginaries and relations. Drawing on insights from practice theory and the sociology of science, technology and professions, we show how diplomatic actors demarcate their professional territory and protect their positions through boundary work. They draw horizontal boundaries between what they see as ‘real’ diplomatic work and distractions and vertical boundaries between themselves and other diplomatic actors, ranking people around status and skills. Overall, digital technologies are implicated in deeper struggles regarding what it means to be a diplomat. A focus on the blended character of diplomatic practice opens new avenues for research on how digitalisation, in contradictory and uneven ways, shapes norms, identities, and social relations and how it – through reflexivity, anxieties and contestation – may shape international politics.

AB - This article develops a new theoretical approach to digitalisation in diplomacy, resituating conventional understandings of the relationship between diplomacy and technological transformation. Challenging the conception that ‘traditional’ diplomacy is being supplemented or challenged by new forms of ‘digital diplomacy’, we show how the ubiquity of digital devices and technologies makes disentangling analogue from digital diplomatic practices practically impossible today. The argument is developed through ethnographic observations of everyday diplomatic work in the European Union (EU) multilateral setting in Brussels as well as interviews with ambassadors, attachés, seconded diplomats, spokespersons and interpreters. To understand the place of digital technologies in diplomatic work, we develop the concept of blended diplomacy by which we mean the dual process of the entanglement of technical and social doings and the contestation regarding how this entanglement impacts professional diplomatic imaginaries and relations. Drawing on insights from practice theory and the sociology of science, technology and professions, we show how diplomatic actors demarcate their professional territory and protect their positions through boundary work. They draw horizontal boundaries between what they see as ‘real’ diplomatic work and distractions and vertical boundaries between themselves and other diplomatic actors, ranking people around status and skills. Overall, digital technologies are implicated in deeper struggles regarding what it means to be a diplomat. A focus on the blended character of diplomatic practice opens new avenues for research on how digitalisation, in contradictory and uneven ways, shapes norms, identities, and social relations and how it – through reflexivity, anxieties and contestation – may shape international politics.

U2 - 10.1177/13540661221107837

DO - 10.1177/13540661221107837

M3 - Journal article

VL - 28

SP - 640

EP - 666

JO - European Journal of International Relations

JF - European Journal of International Relations

SN - 1354-0661

IS - 3

ER -

ID: 313613131