Foreign capital and US states’ contested strategies of internationalisation: a constructivist analysis

TitleForeign capital and US states’ contested strategies of internationalisation: a constructivist analysis
Publication TypeJournal Article
AuthorsTubilewicz, Czeslaw
JournalContemporary Politics
Pagination1-22
ISSN1356-9775
AbstractThe article presents a Constructivist framework for subnational diplomacy (aka paradiplomacy), critiquing the Neoliberal assumptions regarding US states' search for foreign capital as driven by ‘objective' market forces, free of intra-subnational conflicts and geopolitical implications. Using Formosa Plastics' investment projects in Texas and Louisiana as case studies, it argues that paradiplomatic agency—rather than restricted to subnational executives—is located across a range of state and non-state subnational actors, who form intra-subnational, national and international coalitions when advancing or challenging US states' economic internationalization. Their contests over the purpose of international action and the locus of authority that speaks for subnational communities in the global marketplace reflect their intersubjective constructions of reality. Such constructions not only provide subnational actors with an understanding of themselves and their interests, but also delineate the boundaries of what is permissible and necessary, rendering certain internationalization strategies as ‘obvious’, while precluding others.
URLhttps://doi.org/10.1080/13569775.2021.2001156
DOI10.1080/13569775.2021.2001156
Short TitleForeign capital and US states’ contested strategies of internationalisation
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