Norm Entrepreneurship in Foreign Policy: William Hague and the Prevention of Sexual Violence in Conflict
Peer-reviewed Journal Article
True, Jacqui & Sara Davies (2017) Norm Entrepreneurship in Foreign Policy: William Hague and the Prevention of Sexual Violence in Conflict, Foreign Policy Analysis 13(3): 701–721.
Theories of international norm diffusion rely on accounts of
entrepreneurial action almost exclusively identified as normative
non-state actors who persuade powerful states to change their behaviour.
We argue that powerful state agents can (also) be moral norm
entrepreneurs and explicate the foreign policy acts that make them
significant agents of international socialisation. Unlike non-state
actors who set the agenda by advocating for new norms, foreign policy
leaders leverage their identity and position to advance the recognition
and diffusion of already established norms by reframing the moral
prerogative of the ‘national interest’. The paper examines a prominent
case, namely former British foreign secretary, Mr. William Hague's
promotion, through the offices of the British Foreign Commonwealth, of
the international norm prohibiting use of sexual violence in conflict.
We ask why and how did the United Kingdom and William Hague devote the
attention and resources of the foreign policy apparatus to further this
norm established more than a decade earlier in the Rome Statute of the
ICC and by gender justice advocates? Crucially, our findings highlight
the role of foreign policy leadership in re-framing conflict-related
sexual violence as a threat to national and international peace and
security, the strategic use of the individual positioning of the foreign
minister, the harnessing of the foreign policy machinery to mobilize
commitments from other states through networked diplomacy, and seizing
international political opportunities to promote the take-up of the
norm.
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