Regional Security Governance, Audience Expectations, and Foreign Policy Roles: North Africa's Demand that Tunisia Maintains

Authors

  • Authors

  • Imad Mansour
  • John Daniels Hicks

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.31430//IBQB5792

Keywords:

Tunisia's Foreign Policy, Tunisia's Democratic Transition, North African Politics, Role Theory

Abstract

By studying Tunisian foreign policy in the decade after the 2010 popular uprisings, this article contributes to Role Theory by explaining how regional audience expectations influence foreign policy roles. The article first demonstrates how achieved roles develop expectations among regional states as the audience. Then it explains how these expectations condition role enactment. The article shows how Tunisia developed and established a foreign policy posture of strategic distance, defined by neutrality in regional conflicts, adherence to legalism, and pursuit of economic interests. Strategic distance came to be expected by North African states.

Author Biographies

  • Imad Mansour
    Assistant Professor, Critical Security Studies Program, Doha Institute for Graduate Studies. Email: Imad.mansour@dohainstitute.edu.qa
  • John Daniels Hicks
    Graduate Student, Department of Political Science, McGill University, Montreal, Canada. Email: john.hicks@mail.mcgill.ca

Published

2022-11-01