Stockholms universitet

Stephanie Christine WinklerPostdoktor

Om mig

Dr. Stephanie Christine Winkler

Lecturer in International Relations

Stephanie Christine Winkler is a lecturer in International Relations at the Department of Economic History and International Relations at Stockholm University and a lecturer at the Department of Security, Strategy and Leadership at the Swedish Defense University. She received her PhD in International Relations from Stockholm University in 2020. In her research, she focusses on the role of concepts in academic and political life, and specializes specifically in the trials and tribulations of the soft power concept in the context of the ongoing power shift between the United States, Japan and China. More recently, she has started to work on (1) the emergence of Cold War analogies to conceptualize US-China relations, (2) narratives and the global struggle for truth in politics as well as (3) domestic variations of the role of science in politics and its effects on international cooperation amid crisis.

For her dissertation on “Conceptual Politics in Practice: How Soft Power Changed the World”, Stephanie received the best dissertation award in the social sciences in 2020 from Stockholm University. Her work has been published in leading international peer-review journals, such as Cambridge Review of International Affairs. In addition, Stephanie is currently working on a book manuscript on the political dimension of concepts and the soft power concept.

For more information on Stephanie’s research, teaching and her CV, please visit www.stephaniechristinewinkler.com  

 

 

Forskningsprojekt

Publikationer

I urval från Stockholms universitets publikationsdatabas

  • Conceptual Politics in Practice

    2020. Stephanie Christine Winkler (et al.).

    Avhandling (Dok)

    Concepts are a key feature of academic research and international politics. Despite the fact that interpreting, classifying and communicating the world through concepts has far-reaching social and political consequences, their various roles and complex dynamics remain poorly understood in International Relations (IR). Instead of disregarding concepts, conflating them with other cognitive terms such as norms, or obsessing about their ability to scientifically capture reality, this dissertation builds on the emerging field of critical concept studies (CSS), which understands concepts as open and contestable interpretive devices that observers use to make sense of the world, often to steer political thought and action. In line with CSS, this dissertation refers to these political struggles as “conceptual politics”—the ways in which actors coin, use, promote, revisit and fight over concepts in anticipation of performative effects—and argues that it constitutes a key facet of politics.

    The field of CSS is mainly theoretically oriented, and few empirical studies address conceptual politics in practice. The purpose of this study is to further the field of CSS by expanding the notion of conceptual politics. It does so first by developing three issues that previous research presumes are important but does not investigate empirically: the dynamics of feedback loops, or interaction effects between interpretations of the world and the world; reification, the treatment of concepts as if they were real rather than human-made interpretive devices; and travel, the movement of concepts across time, levels and space. Next, the dissertation develops an analytical framework capable of tracing conceptual politics empirically. The dissertation seeks to answer the following key questions: How can we study conceptual politics? How do feedback loops, reification and travel shape conceptual politics? What are the consequences of conceptual politics for world politics?

    Taking an abductive approach, an analytical framework is developed as a “thinking tool” to trace conceptual politics in practice. Based on a case study design and interpretivist process-tracing, the soft power concept—the ability to affect others through attraction—is subjected to a critical concept analysis of its travel from the US to Japan and China and back to the US again. Although soft power has emerged as a key concern in IR and international politics, the concept and its consequences remain poorly understood. This dissertation finds that the soft power concept has become part and parcel of various political struggles over the “correct” interpretation of reality and the way to act on it. The findings reveal the importance of: continuous efforts to ensure soft power’s position in IR; the concept’s common treatment as if it was real; the interaction effects between its various roles (e.g. social fact and interpretive, foreign policy and socialising tool), which have shaped how “power” and “power shifts” are understood and acted on in international politics; and the emergence of new translations and discrete sites of conceptual politics that rely on, exploit, challenge or even ignore the original concept.

    From the analysis, a more complete picture of conceptual politics emerges that underscores many dynamics and effects that would otherwise be missed, and advances our understanding of the role of concepts and the consequences of conceptual politics in IR.

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  • 'Soft power is such a benign animal'

    2019. Stephanie Christine Winkler. Cambridge Review of International Affairs 32 (4), 483-501

    Artikel

    The purpose of this article is to analyse how the seemingly natural fit between Japan and the soft power concept has been possible despite the notorious vagueness of the concept and what the consequences of soft power's reification are. By building on recent scholarship on concepts, expert knowledge and narratives, the article suggests that reification processes are best conceptualized as driven by concept coalitions. The article finds that soft power was narrated and nurtured into Japan's cultural diplomacy, Japan's relationship with the United States (US) and its security policy. The article, moreover, shows that the more soft power was understood, framed and accepted as benign and necessary, the more persuasive arguments about what Japan should do or be in order to wield soft power became. This has legitimized narratives that suggest that Japan's 'proactive contribution to peace' as a responsible ally of the US constitutes an inevitable source of soft power.

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