Can a feminist foreign policy be undone? Reflections from Sweden

被引:2
作者
Towns, Ann
Jezierska, Katarzyna
Bjarnegard, Elin
机构
关键词
Feminist foreign policy; foreign policy; Sweden; governance; implementation; role expectations;
D O I
10.1093/ia/iiae079
中图分类号
D81 [国际关系];
学科分类号
030207 ;
摘要
In 2022, Sweden retracted its feminist foreign policy (FFP). What are the consequences for Swedish foreign policy and for FFPs elsewhere? We published an extensive report on the Swedish FFP in 2023, based on a survey that went out to all Swedish diplomats, interviews with more than 30 key foreign policy officials, and hundreds of steering documents from the Ministry for Foreign Affairs. The article draws out new insights from the report. The retraction is likely to result in a deprioritization of gender equality in Swedish foreign policy. Sweden will likely lose its international leadership role on gender issues. However, FFPs may be more resilient than anticipated because of how foreign policy is governed. Governments that wish to retract FFPs are constrained by three key governance features: First, international agreements and soft law on women's rights place demands on policy content. Second, the decentralized nature of foreign policy implementation allows considerable autonomy on the ground, so that implementors may continue to work with gender equality. Third, longstanding international expectations for Sweden as a gender equality champion create a role-based constraint. These factors contribute to the 'stickiness' of FFPs, suggesting that a retraction is unlikely to result in a wholesale abandonment of gender equality activities. The article also examines the enduring legacy of the Swedish FFP beyond its formal retraction, highlighting adoption of FFPs by a growing number of states in different parts of the world.
引用
收藏
页码:1263 / 1273
页数:11
相关论文
共 50 条
[21]   Sweden's feminist foreign policy in national newspapers in EU member states (2014-2020): Media logic or political logic? [J].
Sundstrom, Malena Rosen .
EUROPEAN JOURNAL OF COMMUNICATION, 2023, 38 (02) :166-180
[22]   The origins of Canada's feminist foreign policy [J].
Chapnick, Adam .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 2019, 74 (02) :191-205
[23]   Feminist foreign policy: an analysis of Swedish cooperation [J].
Soares De Aguiar, Bruna .
RELACIONES INTERNACIONALES-MADRID, 2022, (49) :93-+
[24]   Contesting feminist power Europe: is Feminist Foreign Policy possible for the EU? [J].
Guerrina, Roberta ;
Haastrup, Toni ;
Wright, Katharine A. M. .
EUROPEAN SECURITY, 2023, 32 (03) :485-507
[25]   Exporting Sexkopslagen: Sweden, Sex Work, and the Moral Stakes of Externalizing Feminist Policy [J].
Bullock, Lukas .
SEXUALITY RESEARCH AND SOCIAL POLICY, 2024, 21 (02) :503-513
[26]   Analysing feminist foreign policy: towards the next agenda [J].
Aran, Amnon ;
Brummer, Klaus ;
Smith, Karen E. .
INTERNATIONAL AFFAIRS, 2025, 101 (01) :273-290
[27]   The Past, Present, and Future(s) of Feminist Foreign Policy [J].
Achilleos-Sarll, Columba ;
Thomson, Jennifer ;
Haastrup, Toni ;
Farber, Karoline ;
Cohn, Carol ;
Kirby, Paul .
INTERNATIONAL STUDIES REVIEW, 2022, 25 (01)
[28]   Caring feminist states? Paternalistic feminist foreign policies and the silencing of Indigenous justice claims in Sweden and Canada [J].
Rosamond, Annika Bergman ;
Cheung, Jessica ;
De Leeuw, Georgia .
INTERNATIONAL FEMINIST JOURNAL OF POLITICS, 2024, 26 (03) :609-632
[29]   Canada's evolving feminist foreign policy: Lessons learned from 2017 to 2020 [J].
Tiessen, Rebecca ;
Smith, Heather ;
Swiss, Liam .
INTERNATIONAL JOURNAL, 2020, 75 (03) :294-297
[30]   Applying Feminist-Informed Foresight to Feminist Foreign Policy: A Reflection on Potentials and Challenges [J].
Joester-Morisse, Clara .
JOURNAL OF FUTURES STUDIES, 2025, 29 (03) :75-81