The ‘Global Ireland’ Policy platform, Small Island Developing States and the geopolitics of an interstitial Ireland
DOI:
https://doi.org/10.55650/igj.2024.1505Abstract
Through its Global Ireland strategy, the Government of Ireland is projecting an ambitious foreign policy platform into the global commons. A range of policy modules have been developed and are being deployed discursively in specific targeted markets. It is an ambitious programme, for a small country. Common narratives of Ireland and Irish identity are being projected fuzzily, to best effect, in different regions. Commonly held policy narratives include i) Ireland as a networked member of the international economic order, ii) Ireland as a European Union member of long standing, iii) Ireland as an edge-island, iv) Ireland as an emigrant sending state with a widely distributed diaspora. Here, I find that Ireland successfully deploys these sometimes contradictory narratives from a deliberately interstitial foundation in space. The nexus of connection and separation is creatively deployed in these Irish policies and the Government of Ireland is seen to be performing a powerful political geography as a result.
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