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Entrenching ‘identity norms’ of tolerance and engagement: lessons from rapprochement between North and South Korea

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  01 July 2007

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Abstract

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Revisiting the nexus of identities and norms, this article argues that actors’ attitude and policies are not the automatic reflection of a salient identity but the articulation of what I call ‘identity norms’, defined as standards of appropriate behaviour for in-group actors vis-à-vis an out-group. Central to my argument is that identities become straw men at times of momentous change, whilst identity norms, crafted and propagated through an intersubjective understanding amongst different actors, emerge as a guiding principle in state-to-state relations. By illustrating the trajectories of reconciliation between North and South Korea, this article examines the anomalies of how antagonistic states forge friendly ties.

Type
Research Article
Copyright
Copyright © British International Studies Association 2007