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When States Go Transnational: Introducing Hybrid Actorness as Expanded Foreign Policy

Foreign Policy
International Relations
Media
Religion
Business
Katharina McLarren
Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International law
Katharina McLarren
Max Planck Institute for Comparative Public Law and International law
Bernhard Stahl
Universität Passau

Abstract

The interplay of states and transnational actors has found its way into Foreign Policy Analysis. At the same time, the call for new typologies of foreign policy actors has increased. We therefore develop a typological theory of expanded foreign policy and introduce the concept of hybrid actorness which alludes to foreign policy actors with both state and transnational dimensions in their polity, politics, and policy. We assume that the transnational element is constitutive of such foreign policy actors. To theorize on such an expansion of foreign policy, we employ an abductive approach revisit the polity, politics, and policy dimensions of foreign policy. We establish how these are expanded and then devise a typology of hybrid actorness by identifying different subtypes, i.e., state-religion, state-ideology, state-media, state-business, and state-diaspora hybrids. We argue that this concept will help better grasp the evolving foreign policy phenomenon of the transnational in an increasingly globalised world.