Abstract

Abstract Brazil, limited in military capability or economic reach in comparison to other emerging nations, has resorted to soft-power strategies in recent years. Brazilian presidents have incorporated religious actors and frames as an important piece of their soft-power strategies, since the country is home to globally significant Catholic and Protestant populations. This chapter identifies three potential explanations for variation across presidential administrations: (1) religion is used to convey a particular national identity or to construct a specific foreign policy narrative; (2) presidents use religion as part of their struggle for power vis-à-vis other international actors; and (3) deployment of religion is the outcome of domestic religious groups fighting for domestic power. All three hypotheses shed light on how religion has moved from a matter of international power to a matter of national and partisan identity, thanks to the growing influence of religious groups in Brazilian politics and foreign policymaking.

Full Text
Paper version not known

Talk to us

Join us for a 30 min session where you can share your feedback and ask us any queries you have

Schedule a call