Terministic Compulsion

The title to this post comes from 20th century literary and rhetorical critic Kenneth Burke. It suggests the capacity of language to constrain our actions. It’s a pragmatic stance on the power of language to shape what we can and should do, that how we talk about things sets up expectations for the future. The insight is foundational for scholars of foreign policy that pay attention to things like “discourse.” Meaning, we can learn a lot about a state’s strategic thinking by the way they frame issues in policy texts, public speeches, and in internal organizational communication. The power of the text is not just a fixation for textual scholars – it’s what policy-makers and practitioners use to talk to each other and make sense of what they are doing. If ...

Some Lessons from ISA 2012

So I’m still trying to digest all that I learned from this year’s International Studies Association annual convention. For the first time, there was simply no way to attend all the panels pertaining to public diplomacy and strategic communication. That’s a good thing. I also learned that issues central to public diplomacy and strategic communication studies – information and communication technologies, the politics of information, and the mediatization/mediation of politics – are being eagerly studied across a range of related fields of international studies. I felt the sneaking suspicion that public diplomacy studies, in particular, needs to “get with the program” or else be left behind by more traditional forms of international studies research. ...

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Public Diplomacy & Strategic Communication

Strengthening IIP: Providing Content that Matters

On Tuesday, February 1, 2011 I had the privilege of speaking to Dawn McCall, the Director for the Bu...

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Media & Technology

Twitter credibility

Quick take on the July 29 New York Times article about the twitterific musings of the State Departme...

A Conversation on Media Technology and Diplomacy

I had the good fortune to attend a discussion last week between Alec Ross, the Senior Advisor for In...

Theory & Research

Terministic Compulsion

The title to this post comes from 20th century literary and rhetorical critic Kenneth Burke. It sugg...

Some Lessons from ISA 2012

So I’m still trying to digest all that I learned from this year’s International Studies ...


  • Amb. Casamitjana: I sign off on prearranged tweets & post myself. I don't share personal info. Convey fopo of Mex. Govt.
  • How can groups like Sister Cities benefit from social media? Get the message out!
  • : must think broadly about interlocutors for diplomacy. Social media can help connect/identify.
  • Mex amb. Casamitjana : states suffering from legitimacy crisis for public policy. Sounds like Castells on network power.
  • : social media punishes moderation. Rewards extremist politics. Don't know where this is going.