Postcolonising Danish Foreign Policy Activism in the Global South: Cases of Ghana, India and the US Virgin Islands

There is a growing corpus of academic literature, which is aimed to analyse Danish activism as a new trend of the kingdom’s foreign policy. Different approaches, both positivist and post-positivist ones, study specific features of activism, as well the reasons of why this kind of foreign policy has...

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Main Author: Pliusnin, Nikita
Other Authors: Johtamisen ja talouden tiedekunta - Faculty of Management and Business, Tampere University
Format: Master Thesis
Language:English
Published: 2021
Subjects:
Online Access:https://trepo.tuni.fi/handle/10024/130978
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spelling ftunivtampere:oai:trepo.tuni.fi:10024/130978 2023-05-15T16:11:04+02:00 Postcolonising Danish Foreign Policy Activism in the Global South: Cases of Ghana, India and the US Virgin Islands Pliusnin, Nikita Johtamisen ja talouden tiedekunta - Faculty of Management and Business Tampere University 2021-05-22 fulltext https://trepo.tuni.fi/handle/10024/130978 en eng https://trepo.tuni.fi/handle/10024/130978 URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202104263481 This publication is copyrighted. You may download, display and print it for Your own personal use. Commercial use is prohibited. openAccess US Virgin Islands foreign policy activism Master's Programme in Leadership for Change Denmark Ghana postcolonialism India discourse theories fi= Pro gradu -tutkielma | en=Master's thesis| masterThesis 2021 ftunivtampere 2022-12-11T07:03:44Z There is a growing corpus of academic literature, which is aimed to analyse Danish activism as a new trend of the kingdom’s foreign policy. Different approaches, both positivist and post-positivist ones, study specific features of activism, as well the reasons of why this kind of foreign policy has emerged in post-Cold War Denmark. Nevertheless, little has been said on the role of Danish colonial past in the formation of strategies and political courses towards other states and regions. The heterogeneous character of Danish colonialism has also been overlooked by scholars: while Greenland, Iceland and the Faroe Islands are thoroughly examined in Danish postcolonial studies, so-called ‘tropical colonies’ (the Danish West Indies, the Danish Gold Coast and Danish India) are almost ‘forgotten’. The aim of the thesis is to investigate how the Danish colonial past (or rather the interpretations of the past by the Danish authorities) in the Global South influences modern Danish foreign policy in Ghana, India and US Virgin Islands (the USVI) (on the present-day territories of which Danish colonies were once situated). An authored theoretical and methodological framework of the research is a compilation of discourse theory by Laclau and Mouffe (1985) and several approaches within postcolonialism, including Orientalism by Said (1978) and hybridity theory by Bhabha (1994). Postcolonial activism is coined as an overarching term for the discourse of Danish foreign policy in the Global South with specific variations in each of the studied contexts. It is found out that the Danish colonial past is interpreted as an ambiguous part of Danish presence in other countries’ histories, consisting of both “bright” and “dark” elements. While “dark” elements (slavery, brutality and power inequality) are ‘othered’ and marginalised, “bright” elements (shared cultural heritage) are used to legitimise further cooperation under Danish conditions. By splitting its colonial experience into pieces, the Danish ‘Self’ liberates itself from the ... Master Thesis Faroe Islands Greenland Iceland Tampere University: Trepo Faroe Islands Greenland
institution Open Polar
collection Tampere University: Trepo
op_collection_id ftunivtampere
language English
topic US Virgin Islands
foreign policy activism
Master's Programme in Leadership for Change
Denmark
Ghana
postcolonialism
India
discourse theories
spellingShingle US Virgin Islands
foreign policy activism
Master's Programme in Leadership for Change
Denmark
Ghana
postcolonialism
India
discourse theories
Pliusnin, Nikita
Postcolonising Danish Foreign Policy Activism in the Global South: Cases of Ghana, India and the US Virgin Islands
topic_facet US Virgin Islands
foreign policy activism
Master's Programme in Leadership for Change
Denmark
Ghana
postcolonialism
India
discourse theories
description There is a growing corpus of academic literature, which is aimed to analyse Danish activism as a new trend of the kingdom’s foreign policy. Different approaches, both positivist and post-positivist ones, study specific features of activism, as well the reasons of why this kind of foreign policy has emerged in post-Cold War Denmark. Nevertheless, little has been said on the role of Danish colonial past in the formation of strategies and political courses towards other states and regions. The heterogeneous character of Danish colonialism has also been overlooked by scholars: while Greenland, Iceland and the Faroe Islands are thoroughly examined in Danish postcolonial studies, so-called ‘tropical colonies’ (the Danish West Indies, the Danish Gold Coast and Danish India) are almost ‘forgotten’. The aim of the thesis is to investigate how the Danish colonial past (or rather the interpretations of the past by the Danish authorities) in the Global South influences modern Danish foreign policy in Ghana, India and US Virgin Islands (the USVI) (on the present-day territories of which Danish colonies were once situated). An authored theoretical and methodological framework of the research is a compilation of discourse theory by Laclau and Mouffe (1985) and several approaches within postcolonialism, including Orientalism by Said (1978) and hybridity theory by Bhabha (1994). Postcolonial activism is coined as an overarching term for the discourse of Danish foreign policy in the Global South with specific variations in each of the studied contexts. It is found out that the Danish colonial past is interpreted as an ambiguous part of Danish presence in other countries’ histories, consisting of both “bright” and “dark” elements. While “dark” elements (slavery, brutality and power inequality) are ‘othered’ and marginalised, “bright” elements (shared cultural heritage) are used to legitimise further cooperation under Danish conditions. By splitting its colonial experience into pieces, the Danish ‘Self’ liberates itself from the ...
author2 Johtamisen ja talouden tiedekunta - Faculty of Management and Business
Tampere University
format Master Thesis
author Pliusnin, Nikita
author_facet Pliusnin, Nikita
author_sort Pliusnin, Nikita
title Postcolonising Danish Foreign Policy Activism in the Global South: Cases of Ghana, India and the US Virgin Islands
title_short Postcolonising Danish Foreign Policy Activism in the Global South: Cases of Ghana, India and the US Virgin Islands
title_full Postcolonising Danish Foreign Policy Activism in the Global South: Cases of Ghana, India and the US Virgin Islands
title_fullStr Postcolonising Danish Foreign Policy Activism in the Global South: Cases of Ghana, India and the US Virgin Islands
title_full_unstemmed Postcolonising Danish Foreign Policy Activism in the Global South: Cases of Ghana, India and the US Virgin Islands
title_sort postcolonising danish foreign policy activism in the global south: cases of ghana, india and the us virgin islands
publishDate 2021
url https://trepo.tuni.fi/handle/10024/130978
geographic Faroe Islands
Greenland
geographic_facet Faroe Islands
Greenland
genre Faroe Islands
Greenland
Iceland
genre_facet Faroe Islands
Greenland
Iceland
op_relation https://trepo.tuni.fi/handle/10024/130978
URN:NBN:fi:tuni-202104263481
op_rights This publication is copyrighted. You may download, display and print it for Your own personal use. Commercial use is prohibited.
openAccess
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