(Leira, 2019). However, more recently, new trends have appeared, historicising it as a
practice concept and associating it with institutions, ideas, politics, and policies,
especially due to the pluralisation of actors in the foreign policymaking process and the
existing interconnections between domestic and foreign affairs (Leira, 2019).
Just like diplomacy, or maybe even more, foreign policymaking is often entangled with
domestic politics, with groups pursuing their interests by pressuring the government to
adopt favourable policies, and the national government seeking to maximise their ability
to satisfy domestic pressures while minimising the adverse consequences of foreign
developments (Putnam, 1988). In this two-level game, the national political leader, the
main actors or interest groups, and the key decision-makers, who strive to reconcile
domestic and international imperatives simultaneously, are essential to the
understanding of the dynamics at play (Putnam, 1988). Since decision-making factors
and conceptions of agency continue to be underdeveloped in contemporary theories of
international relations (Kaarbo, 2015), under which global governance studies tend to
situate themselves, this paper fills a gap between Foreign Policy Analysis and
International Relations investigations, discussing how both domestic and systemic factors
can shape foreign policies (Putnam, 1988; Milner, 1997).
Indeed, “foreign policy analysts, in a conscious departure from systemic theories of world
politics, have always highlighted the considerable variation in national foreign policies
and pointed at the relevance of domestic-level variables for explaining this behaviour”,
and current challenges in a wide number of areas, from security to climate change, and
at all levels, have brought an unprecedented contestation of foreign policymaking
(Ostermann & Mello, 2022, p. 3). In this sense, several dimensions of foreign policy
analysis have been expanded and further explored, such as the role of leaders, their
reputations and personal characteristics, the rise of populist parties and their impact on
foreign policy, the influence of civil society, social media, and technological innovation,
and the role of emotions for foreign policymaking (Ostermann & Mello, 2022).
While the international component is, naturally, omnipresent in foreign policy studies,
domestic politics are considered simultaneously everywhere and nowhere in academic
investigations (Kaarbo, 2015). Meanwhile, foreign policy analyses associated with global
governance issues, underdeveloped as they are, have been appearing as a clear
emerging trend (Mendez, 2017). In this regard, according to Mendez (2017), Foreign
Policy Analysis is the best situated discipline and social scientific practice to research
global governance to the requisite depth, including when it comes to issues involving the
(re)shaping of the international architecture and the risks posed by elitism, especially
from Western elites.
Keohane (2009, p. 363) has already recognised that the field of International Politics “is
heavily American and to some extent European […] As the economic and political centres
of gravity shift away from Europe and the United States […] this is bound to change.
Political science will become a global discipline”. Truly, “Western ideologies still dominate
intellectual and academic frameworks. All of the modern ideologies are products of the
West” (Zhang, Gu & Chen, 2015, p. 7). Furthermore, Acharya & Buzan (2007, p. 288)
affirm that almost all IR theory “is produced by and for the West, and rests on an