Teaching foreign policy analysis in Australia: on cultivating an 'FPA disposition'
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Day, Benjamin
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Taylor & Francis Group
Abstract
The United States-centric nature of the Foreign Policy Analysis (FPA)
subfield poses a range of pedagogical challenges, especially when
the subject is taught outside North America. The preponderance
of FPA literature written by US scholars and examining US cases
can frustrate non-US students, who often wish to study decisions
they consider more directly relevant to their own region and
experience. I this piece, I reflect on how I have grappled with this
tension in teaching a postgraduate FPA course at the Australian
National University. I discuss my choice to prioritise cultivating an
‘FPA disposition’ among students and how, as a means of doing
so, I chose to design a curriculum based on a semester-long case
study examining the US decision to invade Iraq in 2003. While this
pedagogical approach may initially seem contradictory to my
long-term aim of contributing to the expansion of FPA beyond
North America, it reflects my conviction that instilling an ‘FPA
disposition’ in the next generation of graduate students is
essential to growing and enriching the subfield in the long term.
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Australian Journal of International Affairs
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Restricted until
2037-12-31
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