Weekly Featured Article
Role Legitimation in Foreign Policy: The Case of Indonesia as an Emerging Power under Yudhoyono’s Presidency (2004–2014)
Moch Faisal Karim
Department of International Relations, Faculty of Humanities, Bina Nusantara University, Indonesia
Abstract
This article analyzes how foreign policymakers legitimize their enactment of role conceptions to play a more active role at the global level toward a potentially reluctant domestic audience. In order to reduce the likelihood of domestic role contestation while at the same time subscribe toward ego and alter expectations, it is necessary for policymakers to legitimize role conceptions and their enactments toward domestic audiences. This article develops the notion of role legitimation to capture this process and puts forward two mechanisms through which role legitimation is performed. The first mechanism is the revival of roles from a specific period in time that is deeply entrenched as an inalienable historical feature of the state. The second one is the reproduction of the international expectations into the domestic political discourse. To illustrate the argument, this article utilizes the case of Indonesia’s foreign policy during Susilo Bambang Yudhoyono’s Presidency (2004–2014), particularly its engagement at G20, its objective to make the Association of Southeast Asian Nations (ASEAN) a global player, and its agenda to promote democracy and moderate Islam at the global level.
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https://academic.oup.com/fpa/article-abstract/17/3/orab010/6235771
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