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The theory of Strategic [[Culture]] was articulated by Jack Snyder in 1977 to interpret the Soviet nuclear strategy. It defines the shared beliefs, attitudes and modes of behaviour that shape a community’s collective identity. These social patterns are constructed through national cultural and historic experiences and enable a state to devise and subsequently achieve its foreign policy and security objectives. As these strategies are culturally determined, they assume a state of “semi-permanence”, as opposed to being merely public policy. | The theory of Strategic [[Culture]] was articulated by Jack Snyder in 1977 to interpret the Soviet nuclear strategy. It defines the shared beliefs, attitudes and modes of behaviour that shape a community’s collective identity. These social patterns are constructed through national cultural and historic experiences and enable a state to devise and subsequently achieve its foreign policy and security objectives. As these strategies are culturally determined, they assume a state of “semi-permanence”, as opposed to being merely public policy. | ||
[[Category:The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary]] | [[Category:The Cultural Diplomacy Dictionary]] | ||
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