Journal Article

Bill Clinton’s ‘Democratic Enlargement’ and the Securitisation of Democracy Promotion

Faced with creating a grand strategy for American foreign policy in the post–Cold War world, the Clinton Administration launched the strategy of ‘Democratic Enlargement.’ This analysis makes two contributions to the existing literature on the topic. First, it investigates the role of Wilsonianism and the ‘Democratic Peace Thesis’ in the discourse of the strategy of ‘Democratic Enlargement’ based on public speeches with a focus on the relationship between democracy and security. Second, it utilises securitisation theory to analyse how Clinton’s Administration used the linkage of democracy and security to legitimise humanitarian interventions in Haiti and Kosovo. By addressing ‘Democratic Enlargement’ in security terms, the Administration securitised democracy promotion and, thereby, created a discourse that helped legitimise a gradual move towards a more militaristic foreign policy during Clinton’s presidency. This discourse offered arguments later utilised by the George W. Bush Administration.

DIIS Experts

 Rasmus Sinding Søndergaard
Foreign policy and diplomacy
Senior Researcher
+45 6058 9080
Diplomacy & Statecraft
Bill Clinton’s ‘Democratic Enlargement’ and the Securitisation of Democracy Promotion
Diplomacy & Statecraft, Volume 26, 2015 - Issue 3