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Showing posts with label appeal. Show all posts
Showing posts with label appeal. Show all posts

Sunday 29 June 2014

Reciprocity




We have identified coexistence and reciprocity as central normative themes running through all diplomatic practice. The other side of the same coin is that in eras when the dominant polities are not prepared to acknowledge equal rights and to negotiate on the basis of reciprocity, diplomacy will not flourish or develop. This applies, in particular, to the all-embracing Roman Empire. The soul of the diplomatic idea is reciprocity, and this was an unfashionable notion in the domineering environment of Roman politics after victories in war. Nor did reciprocity find real sympathy in medieval Europe, when the Empire and the papacy had inherited the Roman claim to rule the world. Similarly, the intensification of religious strife in Europe in the late sixteenth century nearly wrecked the diplomatic system originating in Renaissance Italy.
In other eras, when the reciprocity principle had been accepted, family metaphors were often used to symbolize equal rights and fair exchanges. In the diplomacy of the Ancient Near East they figured prominently. Kings exchanging diplomatic correspondence called each other “brother,” characterized their alliances as “brotherhood,” and described relations of “love,” “enjoying” and “not afflicting” each other’s heart, sharing resources and gratifying each other’s desires. Sometimes, due to differences in age, the image of a father–son relationship was invoked instead.  Whereas paternity seems to have been an expression of indebtedness and deference, fraternity was associated with alliances and friendly relations, albeit not necessarily equality. Exchanges, ranging from brides, gifts and wealth to military assistance, were governed by strong norms of reciprocity. Despite the frequent use of family metaphors, specific reciprocity – where the participants insist on an appropriate “quid” for every “quo” – rather than diffuse reciprocity – where no immediate return is expected – seems to have been the predominant norm. While there are many expressions of expected equivalence of behavior in bilateral relations, variations on the theme “do to me what I have done to you,” mostly reflect expectations of specific rather than diffuse reciprocity.
This was obvious in the exchanges of gifts. “My gift does not amount to what I have given you every year,” complained the Babylonian king to the Egyptian Pharaoh. The Mittanian king Tushratta voiced similar grievances about his gifts: “in comparison with mine they are not equivalent”; moreover, “my brother has not given to me the equivalent of what he dispatched to my father.” While such complaints reflect ingrained expectations of specific reciprocity, one could argue that gift exchanges which are unbalanced in the short term and thus generate the need for continuing contact are much better suited to the preservation of political relationships than barter exchanges, which are perfectly balanced by definition.
Specific reciprocity was expected in other areas as well, such as the treatment of messengers. Tushratta repeatedly told the Egyptian Pharaoh that he would detain the Pharaoh’s messenger, “until my brother lets my messengers go and they come to me.” In short, behind the professed brotherly love in the Amarna Letters one can discern a preference for hard-nosed tit-for-tat strategies. The rule of reciprocity generated an endless process of bargaining in the guise of a competition in generosity.
In the same way that family metaphors were central in Near Eastern diplomacy, notions of extended kinship formed the basis of reciprocity in Ancient Greece. Kinship claims often harked back to the mythical past, and “the Greeks attributed to the Heroic Age a form of internationalism like that of medieval chivalry, participation in a common adventure as in a medieval Crusade.” Appeals to kinship created by direct descent from gods or heroes in prehistoric epochs were central to entering into diplomatic relations. Kinship pleas applied to relations not only between Greek city-states but also between Greeks and non-Greeks, such as the Persian Empire. For the propagation of common ancestry across and beyond the Greek world, it was an essential feature of some of the most famous gods and heroes that they were remembered as promiscuous wanderers. For the panhellenic ambitions of Philip and Alexander, for example, it was important to invoke the myth that a descendant of Heracles founded the royal line of Macedon. These myths of origin and kinship were regarded not as myths but as knowledge. In the Archaic period, having the same ‘Greek’ heroes sire genealogies of Indians, Persians, Etruscans, Epirote Molossians, and so on, apparently seemed natural to many, although perhaps not to non-Greek peoples who were supposed to have descended, say, from Heracles.
In short, diplomatic appeals to kinship between polities existed through most of antiquity. In its origins, kinship diplomacy took concepts of the household, the family, and the clan, and applied them to relations between polities. Two historical transformations tended to erode the use of family metaphors in diplomacy: the rise of Rome to the status of a world empire, and the rise of Christianity with its competing vision of kinship based on religion.
Yet family metaphors figure in Byzantine diplomacy as well. The Persian shah was referred to as the emperor’s “brother.” Unlike Persia, other polities were not considered proper states, and their rulers were mostly labeled “sons” of the emperor. The fraternal relationship with Persia could be reversed in times of conflict, when the shah, too, was addressed as “son.” Friendship metaphors replaced family metaphors to symbolize reciprocity in medieval diplomacy. Resident ambassadors were sent “to win or preserve the friendship of a prince.”
That phrase was a legacy from the earliest stage of the new diplomacy when residents were exchanged only between allies. In some such form as “to conserve and extend the ancient friendship between our two republics,” “because of the loyalty and affection with which my father and I have always regarded the city of Florence,” “in order that your grace my be a partaker of all our thoughts as a friend and brother should,” it remained in use even when the users were habitual enemies on the verge of an open breach.
Today metaphors of family and friendship are reserved for diplomatic rhetoric on festive occasions, whereas hard data on trade balances, foreign investment, currency exchange rates and the like are used as indices of reciprocity. As mentioned earlier, the practice among states of retaliating the expulsion of their diplomats for espionage by expelling an equivalent number of diplomats from the initiating state is a clear-cut case of specific reciprocity. Principles of “give-and-take” also continue to apply to the exchange of information within the diplomatic community. In short, the few examples given above indicate different ways of expressing reciprocity in symbolic, ritualized ways. At the same time, they illustrate the field of tension between specific and diffuse reciprocity that has characterized diplomatic relations throughout history.

?After-reading activities

1 Comprehension questions
1 What is the role of reciprocity in diplomacy?
2What is the use of family metaphors in diplomacy? Give examples.
3 What examples of specific and diffuse reciprocity can be found in history of diplomacy?
4 What is the role of reciprocity in exchange of gifts?
5 What procedures were connected with treatment of messengers?
6 What was the role of appeals to common kinship in Ancient World?
7 What metaphors besides family metaphor could be found in diplomatic relations throughout history?
8 Are metaphors used in diplomacy today?
9 Under what circumstances can diplomats be expelled?
10 What does the principle of “give-and-take” illustrate?

Work with the dictionary and consult the text to do tasks 2 and 3

2 Translate  words and word combinations  from English into  Ukrainian and use them in your own sentences
         Reciprocity; to acknowledge; to flourish; domineering environment; sympathy; papacy; intensification; religious strife; to originate; metaphor; Near East; brotherhood; indebtedness; albeit; grievance; by definition; treatment; to detain; hard-nosed tit-for-tat strategy; in the guise of; generosity; to hark back to; Crusade; ancestry; kinship; genealogy; shah; prince; on the verge of; currency exchange rate

3 Translate from Ukrainian into English
     Взаємність, взаємність поступок; рівноправність; інтенсифікація, підсилення;  кореспонденція; союз; пошана, повага; братерство; двосторонні; кур’єр; реалістичний; ведення переговорів; князь; вірність, відданість; риторика, ораторське мистецтво; вигнання, висилка; напруженість

4 Complete the sentences with words or phrases from the list
        
Tensions; alliance; correspondence; deference; bargaining; city-state; loyalty; bilateral relations; rhetoric; originate; messenger

1.     After all, innovations tend to reflect and fit in with the socioeconomic circumstances of the country or countries in which they _______.
2.     In Europe as a whole, ________ between rulers seems to have been a key means of diplomacy,29 while their meetings, such as that of Louis the German and his brother, Charles of West Frankia, in 870, provided a key opportunity for negotiations.
3.     Rather than forming an anti-U.S. ___________, countries are ‘soft balancing:’ coordinating their diplomatic positions to oppose U.S. policy and obtain more influence together.
4.     Thus, the Spathar-Milescu embassy from Tsar Alexis to the K’ang-hsi Emperor of China faced the fundamental problem that Spathar-Milescu refused to kowtow; a mark of __________ that Europeans correctly saw as taking due respect to the point of humiliating subservience.
5.     Whether this is deemed acceptable or not will depend on the state of _________   ________between the two nations.
6.     They know that it is the message, not the _________, that is the key.
7.     Coercive __________ tactics tend to result in increasingly coercive bargaining on all sides as threats and punishments are reciprocated in a potentially escalating spiral.
8.     My arrival coming just three years after the Iranian Revolution, I found myself literally in an insular __________ whose major communities were newly wary of one another.
9.     The Iran–Iraq War was in its early years and the _______ of Arab to Arab, amply proven in retrospect by the end of the conflict six years hence, was only a hypothesis, a naive one in many eyes.
10. On the other hand, Chinese political discourse is often characterized by a fierce nationalist ______ that is reinforced by the Communist Party’s determination to maintain authoritarian rule.
11. Traditionally public diplomacy was closely linked to conflicts and __________ between countries.

5 Say if the following statements are true according to the text.

1 Central normative themes running through all diplomatic practice are equality and coexistence.
2 Reciprocity was not a popular notion in times of Roman Empire.
3 In diplomacy family matters symbolize sovereignty.
4 Alliance and friendship were embodied in the concept of fraternity.
5 Diplomacy was based on  specific reciprocity.
6 Treatment of messengers was the instance of diffuse reciprocity.
7 Ancient diplomacy was about showing goodwill and generosity.
8 To enter into diplomatic relations in prehistoric epochs one was to claim relationship to a deity or a hero.
9 Diplomatic appeals to kinship existed for a short period of time.
10 Today metaphors of family and friendship are used in diplomacy on festive occasions.