Gastrodiplomacy in Tourism Squarespace
Gastrodiplomacy in Tourism Squarespace
Gastrodiplomacy in Tourism Squarespace
Gastrodiplomacy in tourism
Wantanee Suntikul
To cite this article: Wantanee Suntikul (2017): Gastrodiplomacy in tourism, Current Issues in
Tourism, DOI: 10.1080/13683500.2017.1363723
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Current Issues in Tourism, 2017
https://doi.org/10.1080/13683500.2017.1363723
Gastrodiplomacy in tourism
Wantanee Suntikul*
School of Hotel and Tourism Management, The Hong Kong Polytechnic University, Kowloon,
Hong Kong
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Introduction
The purpose of this paper is to propose and demonstrate an understanding of food experi-
ences within tourism as instances of people-to-people (P2P) diplomatic contact, playing a
role within broader processes of public diplomacy. Furthermore, it seeks to elaborate upon
some of the specific mechanisms and practices by which public diplomacy is performed in
these contexts, and to propose implications for future research and action in the area of con-
fluence of tourism, gastronomy and diplomacy that arise from the insights thus gained.
Food has historically linked people across cultural and geographical distances and
divides, going back to the ancient trade routes based on goods such as spices, coffee and
sugar. Tourism is another phenomenon that links peoples and nations, playing a role on
a par with that of sports in the building of national identity (L’Etang, 2006). Wherever
there is contact and interaction between nations, as in both food and tourism, there is diplo-
macy; not only traditional diplomacy – defined as the “art of conducting negotiations
between governments” (Deutsch, 1966, p. 81) – but also diplomacy between governments
and foreign publics, as well as at a grassroots level, between individuals and groups.
The diplomatic dimensions of both food and tourism have long been acknowledged and
studied. The term “gastrodiplomacy” refers to concerted and sustained campaigns of public
relations and investment by governments and states, often in collaboration with non-state
actors, to increase the value and standing of their nation brand through food (Rockower,
2014). Furthermore, “gastrodiplomacy in tourism” is defined in this paper as the realm
*Email: [email protected]
of policies and practices by which both states and non-state actors seek to engender posi-
tive associations with a national brand among foreign publics, using the channels through
which tourists or potential tourists come into contact with the national cuisine. This is
understood in terms of creating positive experiences around the national culinary brand
to motivate travel to the country, as well as in terms of creating positive experiences of
the national culinary brand during tourists’ travel to the country.
In gastrodiplomacy, food is used to pursue diplomatic aims in government-to-public
diplomacy. Many nations have implemented gastrodiplomacy campaigns during the past
decade to increase their cultural influence abroad. Tourism is implicated in many ways in
these campaigns, as will be discussed, but to date there has been no clear articulation of
gastrodiplomacy in tourism as a coherent field of policy and study. This paper seeks to
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define this field and propose angles of focus for the development of the field in both
theory and practice.
The paper is structured in five sections, bracketed by this introduction and a conclusion.
The first section positions gastrodiplomacy in tourism within the diplomacy spectrum, deli-
neating its scope and importance as a specific niche of public and cultural diplomacy, and
expanding upon the shared roots and concerns of diplomacy, gastronomy and tourism. The
subsequent two sections examine the interplay of food and tourism in the formation of
national brands, and the gastrodiplomacy campaigns through which these brands are pro-
moted. Two further sections explore two areas of focus for further study and development
of the topic that emerge from the discussion of food, tourism and national brands: namely
the various “ambassadorial” roles fulfilled by individuals in the context of gastrodiplomacy
in tourism (the “people” dimension) and the “contact zones” at which gastrodiplomacy in
tourism takes place (the “places” dimension). The paper concludes by offering thoughts on
implications for future study and policy.
Public diplomacy … deals with the influence of public attitudes on the formation and execution
of foreign policies. It encompasses dimensions of international relations beyond traditional
diplomacy; the cultivation by governments of public opinions in other countries; the interaction
of private groups and interests in one country with another; the reporting of foreign affairs and
its impact on policy; communication between those whose job is communication, as diplomats
and foreign correspondents; and the process of intercultural communications. (https://
uscpublicdiplomacy.org/printpdf/22179)
Deibel and Robert (1976) distinguish between “tough-minded” and “tender minded”
public diplomacy. The former seeks to persuade others to adopt one’s point of view
whereas the latter aims at mutual understanding.
Governments increasingly employ P2P approaches to diplomacy to pursue goals in dip-
lomatic relations between countries. This mode of diplomacy is increasingly enabled by
widespread easy access to communications technologies and platforms, and growing
Current Issues in Tourism 3
contact between people across national divides, both virtually (via digital social fora and
networks) and physically (through tourism) (Snow, 2009). P2P diplomacy does not aim
to resolve conflict by approaching it head-on but rather concentrates on building under-
standing through contact between people, seeking to create feelings of common interests
and experiences, so that intractable conflict is less likely to emerge. P2P diplomacy can
happen within governmental public diplomacy, but can also occur without involvement
of governmental or quasi-governmental entities, through “citizen diplomacy,” defined by
the Center for Citizen Diplomacy as “the concept that every global citizen has the right,
even the responsibility, to engage across cultures and create shared understanding
through meaningful person-to-person interactions” (The Center for Citizen Diplomacy,
n.d.).
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Conceptualizing gastrodiplomacy
The theme of food, with its various links to diplomacy, incorporates qualities of cultural
diplomacy. It is also eminently hybrid in nature, as the various themes of this paper will
demonstrate.
Gastrodiplomacy is “a form of public diplomacy that combines cultural diplomacy,
culinary diplomacy and nation branding to make foreign culture tangible to the taste and
touch” (Rockower, 2012), entailing the use of food in nation branding (Wilson, 2013), a
space of convergence of culinary culture and foreign policy. While the term gastrodiplo-
macy may be recent, food has been used towards diplomatic ends throughout history (Nir-
wandy & Awang, 2014). Rockower (2012) distinguishes between gastrodiplomacy and
culinary diplomacy. Culinary diplomacy seeks to increase bilateral ties by strengthening
relationships through food and dining experiences for visiting dignitaries (heads of state,
ambassadors, etc.), whereas gastrodiplomacy involves food’s role in public diplomacy,
which exposes broad public audiences, not only the elites targeted by traditional diplomacy,
to a nation’s food culture to “enhance the edible nation brand” (Rockower, 2014, p. 14).
Gastrodiplomacy is specifically not about international promotion and communication of
food products for primarily economic motives (though it may involve promotional
aspects, such promotion is done in support of spreading cultural influence). It is also distinct
from “food diplomacy” involving food aid and relief, which uses food as an economic and
4 W. Suntikul
exert influence by advocating directly, but rather more obliquely by striking emotional con-
nections (Osipova, 2014). Gastrodiplomacy has been used most effectively by “middle
power” nations, which are not superpowers in terms of cultural, military or economic influ-
ence, but which nonetheless have a presence and influence on the international stage, such
as Thailand, Taiwan, Korea and Peru. However, major powers such as the USA and Japan
have also used food as a diplomatic tool. Rockower (2014) foresees two trends for future
development: “gastrodiplomacy polylateralism,” in which states collaborate with non-
state actors in diplomacy, and “gastrodiplomacy paradiplomacy,” in which sub-state
actors conduct international diplomacy.
Food is a powerful tool in achieving diplomatic goals, not only in lieu of hard power for
middle powers, but also as a supplement for hard power superpowers and as legitimation for
sub-national powers. Gastrodiplomacy is therefore not just a niche of diplomacy, but spans
across the diplomatic spectrum. Food is an ideal tool for public diplomacy, because of its
intrinsic potential to engage “hearts and minds” (Chapple-Sokol, 2013). Having situated
gastrodiplomacy within the field of public diplomacy, the subsequent sections of this
paper will investigate different modes of diplomacy through food in the context of tourism.
minent component of destination image marketing (Dogan & Petkovic, 2016; Edwards,
Fernandes, Fox, & Vaughan, 2000; Fields, 2002; Fusté-Forné & Berno, 2016; Quan &
Wang, 2004; Scarpato, 2002) as well as a tourism product in its own right (Hobsbawm
& Ranger, 1983; Mahachi-Chatibura, 2016). Pictures of food feature prominently in
many countries’ tourism promotion, conveying rich and nuanced messages about a coun-
try’s cultural values and identity (Çalışkan, 2013; Fox, 2007; Frochot, 2003; Lin,
Pearson, & Cai, 2011; Mahachi-Chatibura, 2016). Attesting to growing acknowledgment
of the diplomatic significance of the national food brand, the 2015 Michelin star rankings
for the Red Guide to France were made at the French Ministry of Foreign Affairs, rather
than a commercial space as in previous years (Fabricant, 2015).
Food is an obligatory rather than discretionary aspect of travel, as no person can avoid
eating (Richards, 2002). Beyond fulfilling a biological need, food can be a primary motiv-
ation for travelling to a particular destination (Boyne, Williams, & Hall, 2002; Chang,
Kivela, & Mak, 2010; Henderson, 2004; Karim, 2006; Molz, 2007; Richards, 2002; Rim-
mington & Yuskel, 1998; Sánchez-Cañizares & López-Guzmán, 2012; Tsai & Wang,
2017). The term “culinary tourism” was coined by Long (2004) to denote travel for
which food is a significant motivating factor. Besides eating, this can include other
modes of participation in the “foodways” of foreign cultures, such as the preparation and
presentation of local cuisines. Beyond their experience value, gastronomic adventures in
tourism can also contribute to one’s prestige and “cultural capital” (Bourdieu, 1984;
Heldke, 2003).
The “exposure effect” (Obermiller, 1985; Pliner, 1982) describes how preference for a
particular food increases the more one consumes it, and it has been demonstrated that
people are more inclined to consume a local cuisine during their travels if they have had
past experience of that cuisine (Mak, Lumbers, & Eves, 2012, p. 184; Ryu & Jang,
2006). The expansion of ethnic restaurants abroad in many countries’ gastrodiplomacy
campaigns, as will be discussed later, can be seen as endeavours to spread positive associ-
ations through the exposure effect. The exposure effect draws on the contact hypothesis,
through which increased contact and familiarity encourage acceptance and even desire
for further contact. This principle is borne out in various studies, such as a survey of
Hong Kong residents that determined that significant majorities (from 64% to 72%)
gained a more favourable impression of Korea after being exposed to aspects of that coun-
try’s culture such as Korean television dramas and movies, pop music and food (Kim,
Agrusa, Chon, & Cho, 2008, p. 177). This phenomenon is a projection of the general
struggle of diplomacy – the overcoming of differences to gain mutual appreciation, in
which the ways in which people come together are not left to chance but are intentionally
designed and strategized, for the achievement of particular goals.
6 W. Suntikul
East Asian nations have been particularly active in implementing gastrodiplomacy cam-
paigns. Thailand is considered a pioneer in this regard. The soft power potential of Thai
food became increasingly apparent with the rapidly growing popularity of Thai food begin-
ning in the 1990s, with the number of Thai restaurants in the USA alone increasing from
around 500 in 1990 to over 2000 by 2002 (The Economist, 2002). The Thai government’s
2002 “Global Thai Program” aimed to increase the number of Thai restaurants abroad from
5500 to 8000 by the following year. The subsequent “Thai Kitchen to the World” pro-
gramme was designed to inform domestic and foreign publics about Thai food and its
history, including granting “Thailand’s Brand” certificates to restaurants fulfilling criteria
set by the Thai Ministry of Commerce.
In Korea, the US$ 77 million “Global Hansik” (hansik translates as “Korean food”)
campaign, was launched in 2009, and the Korean Food Foundation founded in 2010,
tasked with creating the “infrastructure for globalizing Korean cuisine,” using instruments
such as a restaurant recommendation scheme, food promotion, education programmes and
chef training courses (https://www.hansik.org/en/article.do?cmd=html&menu=
PEN6010100&lang=en). This “Kimchi Diplomacy” (Rushford, 2003) contributes to a
broad governmental programme of promotion of Korean cultural exports (such as K-pop
and tae kwon do). In 2010 Taiwan’s President Ma Ying-jeo declared gastrodiplomacy a
“policy priority” and allocated US$ 34.2 million to the “All in Good Taste: Savor the
Flavors of Taiwan” campaign. This so-called “dim sum diplomacy” sought to differentiate
Taiwanese cuisine from that of mainland China and to counter Taiwan’s image as primarily
a low-cost manufacturing hub (Booth, 2010). Taiwan has also used outbound tourism stra-
tegically, for instance in sending Taiwanese chefs to cooking competitions and supporting
the establishment of Taiwanese restaurants abroad (Chapple-Sokol, 2013).
In South America, Peru initiated the “Cocina Peruana del Mundo” (Peruvian Cuisine for
the World) campaign in 2006. This campaign is conducted through collaboration between
Peru’s Ministry of Culture, Ministry of Foreign Affairs, the Peruvian Society for Gas-
tronomy (APEGA) and several private partners. The Chief for Public Diplomacy of the Per-
uvian Embassy in the US had ambitions of making Peruvian cuisine as well-known as Thai
(Nicholls, 2006), accompanied by an application for inscription of Peruvian cuisine on the
UNESCO list of Intangible Cultural Heritage (Wilson, 2013).
France is a country for which the culinary arts have always played a central role in the
formation of national identity. In 2010, the “Gastronomic meal of the French” became the
first culinary heritage asset to be inscribed in UNESCO’s Intangible Cultural Heritage list.
In 2013, the French government launched the “Network of Cities of Gastronomy” (Réseau
des Cités de la Gastronomie) campaign, to create a living establishment dedicated to culin-
ary cultures in France and around the world (http://www.repasgastronomiquedesfrancais.
Current Issues in Tourism 7
initiative was aimed at using the leverage afforded by French cuisine as culinary world heri-
tage, to promote knowledge and appreciation of French cultural values and practices (http://
www.repasgastronomiquedesfrancais.org/).
food-related conferences and meetings in Korea, such as the General Meeting of the World
Association of Chefs’ Societies, held in Daejeon in 2012 (UNWTO, 2012). And in a self-
referential manifestation of gastrodiplomacy in tourism, in 2016 Lima, Peru hosted the
United Nations World Tourism Association (UNWTO) Gastronomy and Tourism Forum,
with over 2500 participants.
Tourism development is certainly an important component of France’s “Cities of
Gastronomy” campaign. Attractions are being developed in prominent sites in each of
the four cities to house activities and facilities. Dijon’s International Gastronomy
Exhibition Centre, for instance, opened in 2016 in an historic hospital building in the
city. President Hollande predicted Dijon’s destiny as “a great European and world destina-
tion” through this and other “City of Gastronomy and Wine”-related projects (http://www.
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food and tourism contribute to exposing foreign publics to the present reality of Peru to
counteract preconceptions from negative historical associations.
For Taiwan, the diplomatic challenge is to use culinary culture to differentiate itself
from a larger nation state, the People’s Republic of China (PRC), while avoiding the
especially precarious question of the island state’s political status and relationship with
the Chinese mainland. This perception of differentiation among foreign publics is bolstered
by the spreading of Taiwanese (as distinct from Chinese) restaurants and chefs worldwide:
actively promoting an impression of cultural distinctness, avoiding having to express a pos-
ition on political independence.
France, as one of the world’s most established and broadly respected gastronomic cul-
tures, has been seeking to leverage these credentials to use food as an area in which it can
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credibly assume a global leadership role and as a viable conduit through which it can exer-
cise influence in the world. The Festival of World Culinary Cultures and the themes of the
“Cities of Gastronomy” are indicative of the use of food-related events and attractions to
develop such a role, beyond the inward-looking perspective of lauding the virtues of
France’s own national cuisine, to the reaching-out perspective of using these virtues as a
foundation upon which to serve as a host and facilitator of global discussions, education
and experiences around food.
Just as tourism can be seen as both beneficiary and instrument of gastrodiplomacy cam-
paigns, it is also both beneficiary and instrument of the positive national brands towards
which such campaigns strive. Some measures of gastrodiplomacy campaigns, such as pro-
liferating and quality-controlling restaurants overseas, encouraging export of ingredients
and food products and sending chefs abroad, are ways of reaching foreign publics who
may be reluctant to travel (Rockower, 2012), creating sites and situations of “ersatz
tourism,” in which patrons are immersed in a foreign culinary culture without leaving
their own country. This ersatz tourism can also contribute to tourism-as-such, by building
up familiarity and favourable associations with the national cuisine among foreign publics,
who may become more inclined to visit the country. Other sites are strategically established
within the country to attract certain types of tourists. All of these examples must be under-
stood in terms of their contribution to developing the national brand through food in the
context of tourism.
Similarly, among the successful actions of the Global Hansik programme were the
bibimbap backpackers, young Koreans who prepared bibimbap (a popular rice-based
dish from Korea) for people at various locations on different continents. Global Hansik
also collaborated with private operators to integrate taco trucks selling the Korean taco, a
Korean/American hybrid of bulgogi wrapped in a tortilla, into the promotion of “Kimchi
Diplomacy” in metropolitan areas in the USA (Gelt, 2009; Rockower, 2012). A “Kimchi
Bus” Project was launched in 2011, supported by the Korean government and private
sector partners. The bus travelled to 34 countries, from the United States to Argentina to
Italy, cooking traditional Korean food and promoting the national dish (and UNESCO
intangible cultural heritage) kimchi (Kimchi Bus: Travel Food Truck, n.d.), which plays
a pivotal role in the South Korean national food brand. As already mentioned, gastrodiplo-
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macy should not be confused with food promotion with purely economic goals. While some
of the examples discussed above may aim to encourage tourism, among their goals, they all
have in common that they are driven by governmental programmes that seek to influence
foreign publics’ impressions of their nation and culture.
A report of the Advisory Committee on Cultural Diplomacy, “Cultural Diplomacy: The
Linchpin of Public Diplomacy” (2005), found a need for more exchange of creative artists,
actors and other creative professionals in the interest of cultural diplomacy (Brown, 2009).
Chefs certainly must also be considered among this list. The above examples represent P2P
diplomacy within government-sponsored gastrodiplomacy efforts. That is, while the insti-
gators of the diplomatic overtures are governmental (often in partnership with private sector
entities, demonstrating what Rockower (2014) would term “gastrodiplomacy polylateral-
ism”), and the aims have to do with the influencing of perceptions of a national brand,
contact is made not through governmental channels and media of dissemination and infor-
mation, but rather through enlisting individuals to create positive situations of contact and
exchange around the national cuisine with members of foreign publics.
in Jerusalem put it, “We use the same ingredients. If you can’t work together in the kitchen,
then where can you?” (Franks, 2008).
These are all instances of “gastrodiplomacy paradiplomacy” (Rockower, 2014) in
tourism, instigated by entities other than states without a direct connection to governmental
nation branding, and all intersecting with tourism (while also appealing to locals).
The impetus for some of these examples (such as the bibimbap backpackers and the
Turkish Coffee Truck) originate in governmental gastrodiplomacy campaigns and serve
broader official agendas, whereas others (such as meal sharing and the Ambassador
Program) are driven by individuals and groups with often idealistic motives. Some are
implemented in order to encourage inbound tourism and others make strategic use of out-
bound tourism. All are examples of P2P gastrodiplomacy in tourism, indicating the
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nineteenth century, was largely responsible for increasing familiarity and interaction of the
American public with Chinese culture and people (Barbas, 2003). Even today, most Amer-
icans’ first interactions with Chinese people and food will be at Chinese restaurants in the
USA. Restaurants serving the national cuisine abroad have been supported and promoted
by nations with extreme challenges in generating a positive image, such as the Baltimore
Afghani restaurant opened by the brother of Afghanistan’s former interim leader Hamid
Karzai, and the several Korean restaurants established abroad by the North Korean
Workers’ Party (The Economist, 2002).
Another contact zone in which tourists are presented with culinary representations of a
country is in airplanes, particularly those of national carriers. In the constrained and captive
environment of the airline cabin, the food on offer, along with the comfort of the facilities
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There are many other contact zones, though, that have received less attention in gastro-
diplomacy policy. For all the effort given to promoting food experiences at national cuisine
restaurants abroad, enticing tourists to visit the country and hosting food-related events,
there is still much potential for national gastrodiplomacy campaigns to address the
broader tourist experience of the national cuisine whilst inside the country – including
the vast myriad of sites at which tourists come into contact with local food and people –
the restaurants, homes, food fairs, festivals, cooking schools, shops and markets of the des-
tination. These places form the family of socio-spatial contexts where person-to-person
interactions of gastrodiplomacy in tourism are enacted, and each of these is an area of
potential study and future expansion of gastrodiplomacy efforts.
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culinary brand, from the point of first contact at a restaurant in a tourist’s home country
(already an area of intense activity in gastrodiplomacy campaigns) to the on-site experience
of the national foodscape while visiting the destination (a rich area for potential future study
and policy). An understanding of different “ambassadorial” roles performed by people in
the overall gastrodiplomacy in tourism network is of equal importance.
While some countries – notably Korea – have integrated some isolated elements of in-
country gastronomic experiences in the context of tourism into their gastrodiplomacy cam-
paigns, a holistic approach to the tourism “foodscape” as an integrated and cohesive
national programme of policy has yet to be fully developed by any country. The develop-
ment of such a national policy on gastrodiplomacy in tourism would be of great benefit in
influencing tourists’ experience of the national brand, because of the far more numerous
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channels and longer timeframe available to engage foreign publics through gastrodiplo-
macy when they visit, compared to the short, limited contact achieved through “export”
gastrodiplomacy measures such as ethnic restaurants abroad and initiatives such as the
bibimbap backpackers and Turkish coffee truck. Tourists are immersed in the home
culture and have already established sufficient positive associations with the nation to
desire to undertake the time and expense to pay a visit.
Thus, campaigns of gastrodiplomacy in tourism can and should be all the more ambi-
tious in their aims and more resourceful in their methods, taking into account the full range
of places at which tourists come into contact with the national culinary brand. While there
are examples of campaigns by countries seeking to provide tourists with information on
their culinary offerings, such as the website established by the TAT to help potential visitors
better understand and appreciate Thai food and know where to get different traditional
dishes during their travels (Koumelis, 2013), gastrodiplomacy in tourism should take a
more inclusive focus on the diplomatic foodscape of the nation as encountered by tourists,
in which people (as culinary “ambassadors”) and sites (as “contact zones”) play equally
important roles to food itself.
The various forms of “cultural brokerage” in gastrodiplomacy in tourism raise chal-
lenges: How can governments work with different culinary operators in direct P2P gastro-
diplomacy? How are the gastrodiplomatic roles of restaurants and gastronomic institutions
within the country different from those abroad? How can the people and organizations
engaged in grassroots food activities that are the lifeblood of local food culture (i.e.
street markets) and that spur innovation and invention in the future evolution of food
culture (i.e. food sharing platforms) be engaged without stifling them with undue govern-
mental interference?
Both of Rockower’s (2014) future trends of gastrodiplomacy are applicable to gastro-
diplomacy in tourism. Besides restaurants, food producers, distributors and marketers,
other obvious collaborators for “gastrodiplomacy polylateralism” in tourism include desti-
nation management organizations and locally active NGOs. In bringing members of foreign
publics to a destination, tourism offers opportunities for small-scale culinary enterprises and
local organizations that lack the reach or resources to conduct international “gastrodiplo-
macy paradiplomacy,” making local communities more aware of their role in diplomacy.
Indeed, the role of place and locality becomes much more important than in “export”-
focused gastrodiplomacy campaigns. A “national brand” can perhaps be exported and
broadcast, but a place cannot.
Disclosure statement
No potential conflict of interest was reported by the author.
16 W. Suntikul
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