Nicholas Buhmann-Holmes defends his PhD thesis

Nicholas Buhmann-Holmes defends his PhD thesis "Foreign focusing events - How politicians use foreign events strategically".
Monday
27
October
Start:12:00
End:15:00
Place: Building 25, room 25.2-035, 兴发娱乐官网手机版客户端 University, Universitetsvej 1, 4000 兴发娱乐官网手机版客户端

Nicholas Buhmann-Holmes defends his PhD thesis "Foreign focusing events - How politicians use foreign events strategically".

The defence is public, and everybody is welcome; the defence is scheduled for a maximum of three hours and will be held in English.

Follow the defense online via Zoom >

Department of Social Sciences and Business will host a small reception afterwards.

Supervisors and assessment

Assessment committee:

  • Carina Saxlund Bischoff, Associate Professor, Department of Social Sciences and Business, 兴发娱乐官网手机版客户端 University, Denmark (chairperson)
  • Carsten Jensen, Professor, Aarhus University, Denmark
  • Magnus Bergli Rasmussen, Associate Professor, University of South-Eastern Norway, Norway

Supervisors:

  • Martin B?k Carstensen, Professor (MSO), Department of Social Sciences and Business, 兴发娱乐官网手机版客户端 University (Main supervisor)
  • Kim Sass Mikkelsen, Associate Professor, Department of Social Sciences and Business, 兴发娱乐官网手机版客户端 University (Co-supervisor)

Leader of defence:

  • Lars Buur, Professor, Department of Social Sciences and Business, 兴发娱乐官网手机版客户端 University
     

Abstract

The last centuries of political history have seen numerous foreign events that have, in one way or another, changed the political landscape of another country, as political actors took advantage of these foreign events to reshape politics in their own country. Such events that take on our attention and are utilized to change politics are seen as focusing events. How, then, do politicians use foreign focusing events strategically? That is what this thesis focuses on as it investigates how politicians use the opportunity of foreign events to fulfill their political goals. 

To do this, the thesis builds data sets of Danish parliamentary debates from 1910-1929 and from 1974-2009. These data sets are analyzed through, mainly, quantitative text analysis to find out how politicians take advantages of foreign events. The thesis makes several contributions. First, it develops theoretical frameworks for analyzing and understanding how politicians use foreign events to gain political advantages. Second, the thesis provides a methodological contribution as it shows how we can in practice study the impact of foreign events. Third, the thesis also provides empirical contributions. The thesis builds two comprehensive data sets of Danish parliamentary debates, from 1910-1929 and from 1974-2009, that very substantially increase the number of years for which legislative debate data for Denmark is available. Moreover, the thesis shows how issues such as unemployment support and working hours gained attention on the political agenda right after the Russian Revolution, lending credence to the claim that the Bolshevik threat was vital to bringing forward the social state. 

Finally, the thesis shows how the fall of the Berlin Wall brought more attention to pro-market discourse on the political agenda. These contributions advance the ability of future research to understand and analyze how political actors exploit foreign events to gain political advantages.

The dissertation will be available for reading at the 兴发娱乐官网手机版客户端 University Library before the defence (on-site use). The dissertation will also be available at the defence.

Directions

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