Title of article :
Soft Power and State–Firm Diplomacy: Congress and IT Corporate Activity in China
Author/Authors :
Jade Miller، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2009
Abstract :
In today’s globalized political economy, diplomacy between nationstates
(state–state diplomacy) now exists alongside state–firm diplomacy,
the negotiations between multinational corporations (MNCs) and the
countries in which they do business. While the state must be committed
to the interests of its MNCs in the interest of domestic state–firm diplomacy
(maintaining a supportive business environment), it still has
recourse to address failures in corporate diplomacy and to maintain
the appearance of dominance on the world stage. This paper examined
these strategies through a critical analysis of prepared testimony at the
February 2006 congressional hearing regarding the controversial actions
of four U.S. IT MNCs (Google, Microsoft, Yahoo, and Cisco) operating
in China. I conclude that when the government is constrained from
using its hard power on its MNCs, soft power becomes its most effective
tool. Image, suggestion, and appearance—soft power—can be considered
more important than legislation itself—hard power—and perhaps
even the currency of current state–firm relations.
Keywords :
Soft power , state–firm diplomacy , Corporate responsibility , Informationtechnology
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives
Journal title :
International Studies Perspectives