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Coming Up This Week in ISN Insights…

It's week 14 on our 2011 editorial calendar, Photo: Leo Reynolds/flickr

All this week ISN Insights takes a closer look at relations between Europe and the Islamic world, courtesy of the young scholars who made up our 2010 Junior Associates’ program:

  • We examine the phenomenon of ‘Islamophobia’ on Monday – what it is, and how to break the vicious cycle that perpetuates it.
  • On Tuesday we tackle counter-radicalization policy in a divided Britain.
  • The prospect of enhanced counterterrorism cooperation between EU and Maghreb countries is up for discussion on Wednesday.
  • On Thursday we round out the weekly theme with an examination of Turkey’s new role in the geostrategic landscape of Euro-Muslim relations.
  • Our podcast on Friday delivers the second installment of a discussion about Swiss peace mediation, thanks to Dr Simon Mason of the the Center for Security Studies, ETH Zurich.

And in case you missed any of last week’s coverage, you can catch up here with articles about: AFRICOM’s combat christening in Libya; China’s looming food crisis; Russia’s impending conscription crisis; harnessing the power of social media for the international affairs community; and a podcast on Swiss peace mediation.

The -isms of American Foreign Policy

Looking in Different Directions? photo: Arthur Chapman/flickr

To understand the United States’ role in the world, familiarity with the various frames that decision makers in Washington rely on when formulating foreign policy is helpful. Most statecraft blends these, kind of like a color wheel. The basic contours, however, personified by four giants of American history, are as follows:

The Extroverts

Hamiltonianism maintains that the US should pursue a realist foreign policy, balancing interests, especially material ones, and fundamentally seeks to promote an expansionist agenda. Hamiltonians support a robust national security establishment, a strong dollar policy and a muscular industrial base; in effect the US from WWI to the Great Recession. Domestically, these are the establishment Republicans exemplified by figures such as father George H. W. Bush.

Wilsonianism also subscribes to the furtherance of the Pax Americana. But whereas Hamiltonians favor material interests, Wilsonians emphasize the normative, touchy-feely moral aspects of foreign policymaking. Wilsonians are frequently labeled idealists, like to set up international institutions, are bleeding-heart humanitarian interventionists, prefer to co-opt other states rather than impose their will on them, and ultimately seek to consolidate a global society defined by liberal American values.

Empowering Europe’s Electricity Market

Unlike humans some jellyfish are self-sufficient electricity providers. Courtesy of x3nomik/flickr

Europe is talking energy and there is no easy way out of existing dilemmas: While nuclear and fossil-fueled power plants entail considerable risks, most sources of alternative energy are not yet considered mature enough to fuel Europe’s economies on their own. Like elsewhere across the globe, Europeans are facing tough challenges in their attempt to secure a clean, reliable and affordable power supply.

As in every crisis, the risk looms that countries just look after their own narrowly-defined national interests and either ignore or forget the advantages of a regionally coordinated approach. In their struggle for secure energy, European nations should not lose sight of the potential of the common electricity market. In the long run, it could play a crucial role in enabling a more efficient energy future both from an economic and an ecological point of view. Yet, many obstacles still need to be overcome at the moment.

In an integrated market, electricity could be exchanged efficiently across the continent, connecting demand to the most inexpensive supply no matter where in Europe. Consumers could benefit from choosing from a wide range of suppliers, which in turn would boost competition and innovation. Currently, however, the European electricity markets remain regionally fragmented. Countries and companies are not investing enough in transmission capacities across national borders because they struggle to agree on the financial burden-sharing of these expensive projects. As long as national grids are not fully interconnected, trade cannot evolve.

Misguided Priorities for Internet Governance

Server room, courtesy of Torkild Retvedt/flickr
Server room, courtesy of Torkild Retvedt/flickr

This is a cross-post from the Lowy Institute’s blog, The Interpreter.

If you had to choose between human rights and governance, which one would you pick? Most might go for human rights, but when it comes to the internet, that would be the wrong answer.

In February, the Internet Governance Forum (IGF) held its last preparatory meeting before the 2011 annual meeting, due to take place in Nairobi. The IGF was created following the UN World Summit on Information Society (WSIS) held in Tunis in 2005. The summit was an attempt to internationalise internet governance and make it more open.

The summit had four principal goals: ensuring the access, openness, development and security of the internet. The WSIS attempted to shape a new form of internet governance, that would give more power to international organisations and less power to the private sector organisations like the Internet Corporation for Assigned Names and Numbers (ICANN). Since no agreement was reached in Tunis, UN member states agreed to mandate the IGF to continue discussions on internet governance.

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ISN Insights – Week Ahead, Look Back

It's week 13 on our 2011 editorial calendar, Photo: Leo Reynolds/flickr

Coming up this week in our ISN Insights coverage:

  • On Monday, Johns Hopkins’ fellow Dr John CK Daly takes a closer look at the Libyan combat christening of the US military’s new Africa Command.
  • SOAS Professor Robert F Ash examines China’s looming food crisis on Tuesday.
  • On Wednesday, Simon Saradzhyan from Harvard University’s Kennedy School dissects Russia’s looming conscription crisis.
  • Director of the Lowy Poll Project Fergus Hanson opines about the untapped potential of social media for the IR community on Thursday.
  • Dr Simon Mason of the Center for Security Studies discusses peace mediation in our Friday podcast.

And in case you missed last week’s coverage, you can check it out here: Kazakhstan’s strategic dialogue initiatives; India’s Look East Policy; the new wave of political crackdowns in Zimbabwe; the challenges of statebuilding; and a podcast on some common misperceptions about the ICC.