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Tied Above, Pressed Below: Security Alliances, Social Movements, and the Politics of Overseas U.S. Military Bases

机译:绑在上面,按下在下面:安全联盟,社会运动和美国海外军事基地的政治

摘要

Do social movements matter in security politics? Connecting the international relations literature with social movement theories, my research examines how bilateral security alliances influence state-society interaction and social movement outcomes in the politics of overseas U.S military bases. Investigating how host governments react to anti-base movement pressure while managing alliance relations with the U.S., I argue that the host government's response in finding a balance depends on the level of security consensus held by political elites regarding national security. When host government political elites are significantly divided regarding their perception of national security and U.S.-host state security relations, elites sympathetic to anti-base movements cooperatively engage anti-base activists. Thus a weak security consensus opens the possibility for major base policy changes by anti-base movements. Conversely, when a common consensus regarding security relations with the U.S. exists among domestic political elites, the host government strategically responds to anti-base pressure by either ignoring, foot-dragging, co-opting, or at best, making token concessions to anti-base groups. By providing minimal concessions, host governments are able to maintain positive relations with the U.S. while mollifying major anti-base protests. Social movements, therefore, have little effect on base policy outcomes under conditions of strong security consensus. I use movement episodes in five different countries - Philippines, Japan, Italy, Ecuador, and South Korea - to support my argument. The findings are based on government reports and documents, internal activist documents, participant observation, and in-depth interviews with activists, host government elites, and U.S. officials.
机译:社会运动对安全政治有影响吗?我的研究将国际关系文献与社会运动理论联系在一起,研究了双边安全联盟如何影响美国海外军事基地政治中的国家与社会互动以及社会运动结果。我研究了东道国政府在管理与美国的同盟关系时如何应对反基础运动的压力,我认为东道国政府在寻求平衡方面的反应取决于政治精英就国家安全达成的安全共识水平。当东道国政府的政治精英在对国家安全和美国与东道国的安全关系的看法上分歧很大时,同情反基础运动的精英会合作召集反基础激进主义者。因此,安全共识的薄弱为通过反基础运动的主要基础政策变更提供了可能性。相反,当国内政治精英之间就与美国的安全关系达成共识时,东道国政府会通过无视,拖延,选择或充其量对反基础压力做出战略让步,从而对反基础压力作出战略性回应。基本群体。通过提供最小的让步,东道国政府能够与美国保持积极关系,同时缓解重大的反基地抗议活动。因此,在强烈的安全共识下,社会运动对基本政策的成果影响很小。我使用五个不同国家(菲律宾,日本,意大利,厄瓜多尔和韩国)的运动情节来支持我的论点。调查结果基于政府报告和文件,内部维权人士文件,参与者的观察以及对维权人士,东道国政府精英和美国官员的深入采访。

著录项

  • 作者

    Yeo Andrew;

  • 作者单位
  • 年度 2008
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  • 原文格式 PDF
  • 正文语种 en
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