Editing Kristin Lord

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Public Diplomacy and [[Cultural Diplomacy]] can help people understand the context of America- you might learn about it from movies, from novels, you might learn it from a Law and Order episode, or some play- and Cultural Diplomacy will help you to understand these pieces of information, otherwise you might now know what meaning to draw from them.
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Public Diplomacy and Cultural Diplomacy can help people understand the context of America- you might learn about it from movies, from novels, you might learn it from a Law and Order episode, or some play- and Cultural Diplomacy will help you to understand these pieces of information, otherwise you might now know what meaning to draw from them.
 
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The first thing that Public Diplomacy can do is inform, engage, and influence foreign opinion about specific policies. There is a lot of misinformation about what policies actually entail, and if you want to be understood and build political support for particular policies, the first step is ensuring that people have an accurate understanding of the issue. You can say that the traditional ways of doing this are the media, factsheets, publications, speeches, and you may ask what Cultural Diplomacy has to do with this. I would say that these are the primary instruments for informing people about the policies, but there might be times when culture is the most appropriate means. For instance, you can argue that if the United States was trying to explain its position on [[Climate Change|climate change]], then documentaries are far more influential than any official speech or any presidential interview. So culture can be very powerful and something that people can relate to on a mass level.
 
The first thing that Public Diplomacy can do is inform, engage, and influence foreign opinion about specific policies. There is a lot of misinformation about what policies actually entail, and if you want to be understood and build political support for particular policies, the first step is ensuring that people have an accurate understanding of the issue. You can say that the traditional ways of doing this are the media, factsheets, publications, speeches, and you may ask what Cultural Diplomacy has to do with this. I would say that these are the primary instruments for informing people about the policies, but there might be times when culture is the most appropriate means. For instance, you can argue that if the United States was trying to explain its position on [[Climate Change|climate change]], then documentaries are far more influential than any official speech or any presidential interview. So culture can be very powerful and something that people can relate to on a mass level.

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