Nancy Snow

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Dr. Nancy Snow: Persuasion with Principle

Snow in Japan

In March I'm participating as a guest of the State Department's U.S. Speaker and Specialist Program on the topic of Obama's public diplomacy.  The U.S. Embassy in Japan has invited me to speak at all four American Centers on the topic of “Persuader-in-Chief: The New Public Diplomacy under the Obama Administration.” My travel will take me from the Consulate General in Naha, Okinawa, to Tokyo American Center, and then on to American Centers in Fukuoka, Nagoya, and Kansai.  I'll be doing public lectures and more intimate roundtables.   

In the summer of 1993 and fall of 1994 I traveled to Japan as a cultural affairs and educational exchange representative of the United States Information Agency.  Both trips were very memorable, with the first involving participation in the International Youth Village, a global gathering of young professionals at the base of Mount Fuji, and the second an exchange of cultural affairs officers, myself from USIA to Japan and Tadashi Ogawa of the Japan Foundation to USIA. (Tadashi and I have remained in touch and he contributed a chapter on Japanese public diplomacy to my Routledge Handbook of Public Diplomacy.)  The second trip included a family home stay where I slept on tatami mats and took part with my Japanese host mother and daughter in the urban Japanese bath.  Japan is famous for its strong cultural diplomacy and exchange programs, including the JET and Fulbright Programs.   

 

 

Nancy Snow: The Death of Public Diplomacy Has Been Greatly Exaggerated


The downside is an overreliance on the public diplomat-in-chief in the White House. Public diplomacy is best practiced as a symphony, not a one-man band. National reputation does not reside in one person, much less in one electoral outcome. It is deeply buried in the perceptions of countless people around the world, often rooted in their own national cultures, and can be rebuilt slowly and painstakingly only by altering the root causes of a country's good or bad name.

Consider what led to America's recently improved reputation in the world. It was a global perception that this new president would not only pay lip service to a new America that listens and learns, but would also change U.S. policies that connoted American unilateralism. We are now on a collision course among American soft power in rhetoric, a global citizen president in principle, and a commander-in-chief in practice.

Read my entire article in the November 2009 issue of Perspectives magazine. 

 
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Snowisms: Quips and Quotes

" Television has spread the habit of instant reaction and has stimulated the hope of instant results. "
Arthur M. Schlesinger, Jr.

Dr. Snow's Twitter Updates

drpersuasion: "I am unabashedly biased" Former L.A. Times political cartoonist Conrad dies - latimes.com http://t.co/oZnRgS1
drpersuasion: Video campaign invites American Muslims to share their normalcy - latimes.com http://t.co/1Lilqfz
drpersuasion: Superbroke, Superfrugal, Superpower? - http://nyti.ms/az4O0t We are today The Frugal Superpower--not very bold or confident anymore.
drpersuasion: Hey Meg, California Is Not For Sale http://huff.to/d8L57d via @huffingtonpost