Giles Scott- Smith
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A new urban agenda? US cities, soft power, and transatlantic relations
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Over the past twenty years or so, cities have become increasingly visible as initiators, partners, and pathfinders of international relations. This new ‘urban agency’ has attracted increasing attention for the notion of city diplomacy and the role and legitimacy of cities as international actors in their own right. Despite – or perhaps because of – their cultural capital, US cities came relatively late to the game in terms of investing in paradiplomatic resources. However in the last five years there have been major developments, with Los Angeles becoming a significant actor in Trans-Pacific relations, New York presenting its climate agenda in defiance of the Trump administration, and the City and State Diplomacy Bill entering Congress. This chapter will examine the role of US cities in international relations, with a special focus on their place in the transatlantic context. It questions to what extent US (and European) cities have opened up novel forms of transatlantic dialogue, and how far their activities are changing the context for transatlantic relations.

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