Watson Institute for International and Public Affairs, 2019
As far-right populists are forming governments all over the world, it becomes imperative to study how far-right populist leaders create their foreign policy identities and the consequences of these identities for international affairs. Yet systematic academic analyses to this regard are still missing in the literature. In this talk, Feliciano de Sá Guimarães will analyze how Bolsonaro’s foreign policy built a multi-layered conservative identity-set in its foreign policy-making. He will delve into five developed case studies: (1) the alignment with Donald Trump on the Venezuelan crisis, (2) the alignment with Benjamin Netanyahu on Middle Eastern politics, (3) the OECD membership negotiation, (4) the alignment with theocratic governments in the UN Human Rights Council and (5) the trade negotiation with the European Union.