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Guerrilla Diplomacy: Rethinking International Relations - Daryl Copeland
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From the monthly archives:

May 2010

Political Officers in Conflict Zones: Public Diplomacy and Counterinsurgency – Part III

by daryl.copeland on May 25, 2010

Political Officers in Conflict Zones: Public Diplomacy and Counterinsurgency – Part II

by daryl.copeland on May 11, 2010

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  • Guerrilla Diplomacy: In The News

    • May 15, 2012:
      Public Diplomacy and Branding, Part III: A Pair of Aces?
      USC/CPD Blog
      If branding is about selling dreams, public diplomacy is about sharing them.
      Link
    • May 2, 2012:
      Public Diplomacy, Branding and the Image of Nations, Part II: More of the Same, or Different?
      USC/CPD Blog
      PD and nation branding share many superficial attributes, but drilling down reveals that the differences outweigh the similarities.
      Link
    • May 2, 2012:
      Ottawa-Gatineau on the world stage
      Canadian Geographic
      What the Capital Region needs to enhance diplomacy.
      Link
    • April 18, 2012:
      Diplomacy still matters – but new training needed
      Embassy
      If provided with resources and training, diplomats can and should be restored as catalysts for imaginative strategic thinking.
      Link
    • April 12, 2012:
      GD at the Diplomatic Press Attaches Club in London
      Embassy Magazine (UK)
      Link
    • April 12, 2012:
      CBC cuts gut cherished international service
      Montreal Gazette
      Link
    • April 5, 2012:
      A Diminished Canada
      The Mark
      CBC's announcement that it is withdrawing from foreign-language broadcasting in two of the four BRIC countries is just another nail in the coffin for Canadian internationalism.
      Link
    • April 3, 2012:
      A diminished Canada at home and abroad
      Ottawa Citizen
      Link
    • April 3, 2012:
      The Incredible Shrinking Canada
      The Mark
      Last week's budget spells disaster for what little remains of Canadian internationalism.
      Link
    • March 21, 2012:
      Observers regret shelving of annual foreign diplomats forum
      canada.com
      Another indication of DFAIT's demise
      Link
    • March 21, 2012:
      Public diplomacy, Branding and the Image of Nations – Part I
      USC/CPD Blog
      What's in a brand?
      Link
    • March 4, 2012:
      Connecting the Dots
      The Mark
      The search for meaning in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya ... and Syria
      Link
    • February 16, 2012:
      Heteropolarity, globalization and the new threat set
      Embassy
      In the heteropolar world under construction, security will flow not from defence, but from development and diplomacy. And the diplomatic centre of gravity will shift away from formal chancelleries and into storefronts, souks, and conflict zones.
      Link
    • February 2, 2012:
      Heteropolis rising: World order in the 21st century
      Embassy
      With the emergence of distinctive poles, international power and influence have become more difficult to align
      Link
    • January 19, 2012:
      Heteropolarity, security and diplomacy
      Embassy
      Since the end of US unipolar dominance, most commentators have suggested that we are reverting to a multipolar world order, as was the case prior to the Cold War. This time around, however, the sources of international power and influence among and between various poles will be much more difficult to align.
      Link
    • January 12, 2012:
      A Future for Canadian Public Diplomacy?
      The Mark
      With memories of Canadian leadership on global issues receding, the generation of renewed commitment will be an uphill battle.
      Link
    • January 4, 2012:
      Canadian Public Diplomacy, Then and Now
      The Mark
      Canada was once a pioneer in public diplomacy, but today that legacy has been left behind.
      Link
    • January 3, 2012:
      A New Diplomacy for the EU?
      New Europe
      Can the EU speak as one in addressing the issues which imperil the planet?
      Link
    • December 29, 2011:
      Today, most Canadians don’t look far beyond their front door
      Ottawa Citizen
      Demographic shifts and changes in international news coverage have transformed the public environment in which international policy is formulated.
      Link
    • December 5, 2011:
      A retreat from the world stage
      Ottawa Citizen
      Domestic politics and diminished bureaucratic capacity have down-sized Canada's place in the world.
      Link
  • Categories on this site

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  • Guerrilla Diplomacy Named one of Embassy’s 20 Most Influential Reads


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  • Recent Comments

    • Ryder on Rethinking Diplomacy, Security and Commerce in the Age of Heteropolarity
    • peter sibbald on Public Diplomacy, Branding and the Image of Nations, Part I:What’s in a Brand?
    • Muhammad on Public Diplomacy, Branding and the Image of Nations, Part I:What’s in a Brand?
    • Mark Collins on Connecting the Dots: The Search for Meaning in Iraq, Afghanistan, Libya, and Syria
    • Ed Nixon on Heteropolarity, Globalization and the New Threat Set
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  • Book

    Available Now

    Read the Introduction


    Reviews

    "...Copeland sensibly calls for foreign ministries and their diplomats to take the lead..." (PDF), Evan H. Potter, University of Ottawa, International Journal, CIC, Autumn 2010

    "...a rich argument spiced by Copeland's years of experience on the ground.", Ali Fisher, Independent Scholar, Journal of American Studies, Cambridge Journals, August 2010

    A New Breed, Edward Salazar, Foreign Service Journal, American Foreign Service Association, January 2011

    The transformation of diplomacy: mysteries, insurgencies and public relations (PDF), Ian Hall, International Affairs, Chatham House, UK

    Review in Library Journal -Social Sciences, Marcia L. Sprules, Council on Foreign Relations Lib., NY, September 1, 2009

    Diplomacy in the Trenches (PDF), Jeff Davis, Embassy - Canada's Foreign Policy Newspaper

    Guerrilla tactics for diplomats, Katharina Höne, DiploFoundation

    Guerrilla Diplomacy: Rethinking International Relations

    Daryl Copeland charts the course for a new kind of diplomacy, one in tune with the demands of today’s interconnected, technology driven world.

    Eschewing platitudes and broadly rethinking issues of security and development, Copeland provides the tools needed to frame and manage issues ranging from climate change to pandemic disease to asymmetrical conflict and weapons of mass destruction. The essential keystone of his approach is the modern diplomat, able to nimbly engage with a plethora of new international actors and happier mixing with the population than mingling with colleagues inside embassy walls.

    Through the lens of Guerrilla Diplomacy, Copeland offers both a call to action and an alternative approach to understanding contemporary international relations.

  • By the Author

    • A Better Way To Do International Policy
    • A Diminished Canada
    • A Future for Canadian Public Diplomacy?
    • A Future Without Force
    • A New Diplomacy for the EU?
    • A Place for Science Diplomacy?
    • A Real Revolution in Diplomacy
    • A retreat from the world stage
    • Afghanistan; Seven Steps Towards Peace
    • After Osama: Time to Turn the Page?
    • An Excellent New Zealand Adventure
    • An International Power?
    • Beyond Relief
    • Beyond the front door
    • Bibliography of Daryl Copeland’s Print Publications
    • Cairo Burning
    • Commercial Diplomacy: A New Frontier
    • Connecting the Dots
    • Connectivity and Networks Rule
    • Cyber Diplomacy
    • Dark shadow over the Thai smile
    • Daryl Copeland’s Flickr Photostream
    • Diplomacy in the Digital Age
    • Diplomacy still matters – but new training needed
    • Diplomacy Today: Lessons from the Raj?
    • Diplomacy was on the rebound in Montreal
    • Diplomacy, Journalism and the New Media
    • Diplomats on the Front Line in Counterinsurgency Work
    • Egypt After Mubarak: Talking About a Revolution?
    • Failure in Copenhagen
    • Fighting with Diplomacy
    • Fixing Foreign Ministries: Message From Oz
    • Forces of Globalization: Looking Forward, Looking Back
    • From DFAIT to a Department of International Affairs?
    • Getting Down…
    • Globalization Nation
    • Guerrilla Diplomacy for the 21st Century
    • Guerrilla Diplomacy: The Revolution in Diplomatic Affairs
    • Hard Power vs. Soft Power
    • Heteropolarity, globalization and the new threat set
    • Heteropolarity, security and diplomacy
    • Heteropolis rising: World order in the 21st century
    • How Canada Could Contribute to Science Diplomacy
    • How Obama's Nobel can Resurrect Diplomacy
    • How To Stop An Insurgency
    • Is Public Diplomacy for Everyone?
    • It's Time to Build a Better Diplomat
    • Lawrence of Afghanistan
    • Making Diplomacy a Counterinsurgency Weapon
    • Making Sense of Intelligence
    • Memo to the EU:What's Next?
    • No Dangling Conversation
    • No Time to Celebrate NATO Victory in Libya
    • Ottawa-Gatineau on the world stage
    • PD and Counterinsurgency
    • PD in Conflict Zones
    • PD’s Most Formidable Adversary: The Say-Do Gap
    • PD, POR and the Public Environment
    • Public Diplomacy and Branding
    • Public Diplomacy and Branding, Part III: A Pair of Aces?
    • Public diplomacy, Branding and the Image of Nations – Part I
    • Public Diplomacy, Branding and the Image of Nations, Part II: More of the Same, or Different?
    • Putting the Human Back In Security
    • Questioning the Wisdom of Foreign Intervention
    • Re-Imagining Ottawa as a Diplomatic Capital
    • Role of the FCO in UK Government
    • Science Diplomacy: New Day or False Dawn
    • Science Diplomacy: What's It All About?
    • Science, Technology and Global Change
    • Sitting on a Powder Keg
    • Smart Power and the Diplomatic Surge
    • Stabilizing the Global Village with Guerrilla Diplomacy
    • Taking Stock of WikiLeaks and Cablegate: A “Napster Moment” for Government?
    • The Disappearing Foreign Ministry
    • The Incredible Shrinking Canada
    • The Lesson of Iraq
    • The Real Threat Set: Humanity's Race Against Time
    • The Science of International Politics
    • The War That Started While No One Was Watching
    • The Year Ahead
    • Towards a Grand Strategy
    • Transformational Public Diplomacy
    • True North in Transition: Canadian Foreign Policy Post-9/11
    • Virtuality and Foreign Ministries
    • War and Diplomacy
    • What Canada's Security Council Loss Says About Us
    • What's in a Nation's Brand?
    • What's Next for Canada's Armed Forces
    • What's Next for Libya
    • When Might is Not the Right Way
    • Where Diplomacy Resonates
    • Whither Development?
    • WikiLeaks Revelations: The Implications for Diplomacy
    • WikiLeaks' short-term damage, long-term gains
    • Yet Norway Responds with Grace
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