Peruvian foreign policy in the new millennium: Continuity and change

Authors

  • Ronald Bruce St John Bradley University

    Ronald Bruce St John earned an MA and PhD at the Josef Korbel School of International Studies, University of Denver. An affiliate professor at the Institute of International Studies, Bradley University, for 24 years, he also has been a guest lecturer at the Diplomatic Academy of Peru on several occasions. He has published 23 books and monographs and contributed to 28 others, including Toledo’s Peru: Vision and Reality (2010), “Ideology and Pragmatism in the Foreign Policy of Peru” in Latin American Foreign Policies (2011), “Peru: a model for Latin American
    diplomacy and statecraft” in Routledge Handbook of Diplomacy and Statecraft (2012), and “The Peruvian Response to the Rise of Brazil” in Foreign Policy Responses to the Rise of Brazil (2016). Contact: rbstjohn@comcast.net

DOI:

https://doi.org/10.18800/revistaira.201702.002

Keywords:

Foreign policy, Alberto Fujimori, Alan García, Ollanta Humala, Alejandro Toledo

Abstract

Following almost three decades of political instability, eco­nomic uncertainty, and activist diplomacy, President Alberto Fujimori in the early 1990s returned a degree of economic and political stability to Peru. To restore the international standing of Peru, he also reoriented Peruvian foreign policy, modifying its direction, content, and tone. In the new millennium, successive Peruvian governments, from Alejan­dro Toledo to Ollanta Humala, have built on the initiatives introduced by Fujimori with a focus on traditional concerns, including sovereignty, territorial integrity, economic inde­pendence, regionalism, and continental solidarity. Notable for both continuity and coherence, Peruvian foreign policy after 2000 also evidenced a degree of pragmatism when an increasingly complex world called for new solutions to old problems.

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Published

2017-07-18

How to Cite

St John, R. B. (2017). Peruvian foreign policy in the new millennium: Continuity and change. Revista Del Instituto Riva-Agüero, 2(2), 65–119. https://doi.org/10.18800/revistaira.201702.002

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Artículos