Diplomacy is an institution that has undergone tremendous change over the last century-not least in relation to the new, supranational institutions of the European Community/European Union. Nonetheless, it is only very recently that political scientists and historians have taken an interest in the changes brought about by European integration processes for diplomatic norms, roles, and practices. This article investigates the background for this late and limited interest. It does so by comparing and contrasting dominant theoretical trends that have shaped research on European diplomacy in the two disciplines since the Second World War. Against this background it briefly evaluates the recent surge in research on diplomacy and the European Union within political science, and it points to possible avenues for further, joint, research combining the transnational and sociological approaches adopted by political scientists with the attention to temporality and national specificities characteristic of historians' dealings with European diplomacy.
机构:
Univ London London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Dept Int Relat, London WC2A 2AE, EnglandUniv London London Sch Econ & Polit Sci, Dept Int Relat, London WC2A 2AE, England
Bojkov, VD
MILLENNIUM-JOURNAL OF INTERNATIONAL STUDIES,
2003,
32
(03):
: 743
-
745