The Art of International Friendship: Exploring Twinning in a Global Age

Lead Research Organisation: Queen Mary University of London
Department Name: Politics

Abstract

Twinning refers to the construction of formal or informal ties between two towns or cities usually located in different countries. Initially intended as a measure to encourage trust, understanding and cooperation between fragmented nations in the wake WWII, during the latter half of the twentieth century the practice of twinning extended from Europe all across the globe, taking a variety of new and interesting forms. However, the value of town twinning - with both European and more international constituencies - has recently been questioned in the UK media and in Parliament. Some suggest that twinning has little utility for local publics in an age of globalisation and mass tourism, whilst others have linked twinning to 'junkets' that only serve to benefit local councillors. In the wake of the 2008 economic crisis, local council funding for twinning related activities was slashed all across the UK. In spite of this, many projects have survived, running on the steam, initiative and sustained engagement of an assortment of trans-local groups. How have they survived? What kinds of benefits are derived from engaging with these initiatives? Why do arts and cultural exchanges feature so prominently among twinning activities?

Notably, although term 'friendship' is ubiquitous across policy documentation, civil society campaigns and other materials relating to twinning, scholarly work in this area is extremely limited. In academe, 'international friendships' are commonly defined as strategic or diplomatic alliances among states. Yet a top-down and state-centric characterisation fails to capture the wider web of factors that can foster and sustain friendships that cross borders, including solidarity, empathy, art production and inter-cultural exchange. At a time when social fragmentation and cultural polarisation appear to be on the rise, this research project seeks to advance academic and practical understandings of 'international friendship' by focussing on the civic and political value of town twinning. In particular, by weaving together concepts and methods drawn from International Relations, Social Movement Studies, and Aesthetics, it will generate new insights into how cross-border 'friendships' are experienced, understood and maintained by state and non-state actors operating across the local, national and international levels.

The proposed project engages policy officials, civil society actors and arts partners in key aspects of both the research design and dissemination phases. It promises to generate original qualitative data and conceptual advances which will be of relevance to the work of these groups, but also has a wider relevance for members of the general public and academe. Unfolding in interrelated six strands or work packages, it will meld desk based research with interviews, ethnographic and arts-based techniques. In this way, it will build on both the sensibilities and methods that the Principle Investigator (PI) has developed in her work to date which has addressed the political role of art in Latin America. It will also enable the PI to further hone her research methods and leadership capacity through a comprehensive programme of skills development addressing visual methodologies, in-depth interviewing and languages, all of which will serve to complement and strengthen the project.

Planned Impact

Why is this project important and for whom?

International Policy-makers - The notion of 'value' in policymaking circles is increasingly tied to the needs of economics, business and accounting. Social, civic and political value are much harder to quantify than economic value but they are nonetheless important considerations for policy-making. This project will build an evidence base on 'value' that goes beyond 'the economic offer' of twinning. Beyond this, undertaking this research project will also make the PI well-situated to address emerging questions about the nature, evolution and worth of European cultural diplomacy in the wider context of the 'Brexit' process.

Twinning Organisations and Solidarity Movements - In the wake of the 2008 financial crisis, twinning projects were hard-hit by local government funding cuts. Rather little research on the value of twinning exists which might provide a basis for: a) evaluating the impact of existing projects b) challenging divestments from existing twinning projects; and/or, c) establishing new links in the future.

The General Public - Public understanding of 'what twinning delivers' is limited and has been compounded by a great deal of critical media coverage in recent years. In the public imaginary, twinning is often linked to "jollies, junkets, and jamborees" for local councillors (Clarke 2009). This project will enhance public understanding of what 'twinning' is and who it serves. Among other things, the project will illuminate the work of activist and community organisations in advancing international friendships that have potential to deliver benefits across diverse constituencies.

Academia - The term 'friendship' is ubiquitous across twinning projects yet scholarly work in this area is extremely limited. In International Relations, 'international friendships' are commonly defined as strategic alliances among governments. Whilst this top-down approach featured strongly in the early history of twinning, it does not tell the whole story. This project will examine alternative drivers of friendships that cross borders, including solidarity, empathy and trans-local cultural exchange. In so doing, it will bring together distinct bodies of theorising (on political theory, social movements, aesthetics and emotions) and offer new analytical tools.

Publications

10 25 50
 
Title LINES: Making Friends; Crossing Borders 
Description For LINES, I worked in collaboration with Minute Works graphic design studio to co-produce a series of eight unique posters. These monochrome posters, comprised of interwoven lines, represent examples of twinning practice - past and present - that have worked to disrupt existing constellations of global power and challenge the status quo. The posters capture the human relationships and stories of social change that have emerged from twinning relationships. They were exhibited alongside a sketchbook which functions as an artefact of my research journey. Similar to a fieldwork diary, the multimedia artwork found in the sketchbook captures some of the emotional and cognitive processes elicited by the research process rather than its outcomes and conclusions. 
Type Of Art Artistic/Creative Exhibition 
Year Produced 2023 
Impact I was invited to discuss the exhibition with Ed Vaizey on Times Radio. The public launch of the exhibition attracted 60 guests. I have also been interviewed for a podcast produced by Global Politics Unbound. Several academics across Queen Mary University have run seminars on visual and arts based methodologies in the exhibition space, using my exhibition as an example of best practice. 
 
Title Visual Research Diary 
Description As part of my work I developed a set of images (drawings, collage, prints and paintings) that operate similarly to ethnographic field notes. Inspired by the work of Michael Taussig, Frida Kahlo, Gloria Andaldua, Sophie Harman and Roland Bleiker, this body of images, maps, and multimedia collage exemplifies 'art as research' and particularly the ways that art can communicate the ambiguities, contingencies and messiness of the research process. 
Type Of Art Artwork 
Year Produced 2020 
Impact This body of artwork was shown alongside 8 graphic prints as part of the public exhibition LINES: Making Friends; Crossing Borders. 
URL https://www.qmul.ac.uk/media/news/2022/hss/new-exhibition-celebrates-twin-towns-building-bonds-acros...
 
Description This project has achieved a fuller understanding of the ways that twinning practice has widened, deepened and transformed from the post-war peacebuilding project. Two recently published journal articles chronicle the ways that twinning has been taken up as a tool of political solidarity; and, the ways that the discourse and practice of twinning and international development have converged at intervals over the last fifty years. A third article, published in 2021 asks and answers the question: 'what is the public value of twinning?'. A forthcoming book examines twinning practice as an enactment of 'friendship' and uses this as a jumping off point for re-evaluating dominant conceptions of friendship in International Relations.

A stakeholder report, 'Moving Forward Together' was published in 2021 to meet the needs and requests of non-academic audiences - namely twinning associations, local councils, and other twinning networks. The report reviewed the 'state of play' in twinning today and made 6 recommendations for change.

An exhibition, 'LINES' launched in February 2023, bringing the stories I have collected in this project to a wider audience. This was a work of co-production.
Exploitation Route The material published in the journal articles and books might be taken up, built upon and/or challenged by other scholars working across the fields of social movement studies, international politics, sociology and development. It can be used as teaching material for students; and it can be used to form the historical background for public facing events, such as exhibitions on local and trans local histories.

The recommendations made in the stakeholder report can and have been used to inform emerging practice among local councils and twinning associations/networks.

'LINES' featured eight graphic posters that told stories about twinning that were linked to world politics. It also featured my own fieldwork drawings. These have been used a teaching resource and may form the basis for further reflective writing on arts based methods, aesthetics and co-production.
Sectors Communities and Social Services/Policy,Creative Economy,Education,Government, Democracy and Justice,Culture, Heritage, Museums and Collections,Security and Diplomacy

URL https://friendship-project.international
 
Description My stakeholder report was compiled on the basis of interview data which captured some of the needs and concerns of actors working in this space. The report makes 6 key recommendations for best practice in twinning and linking. It has been widely disseminated among twinning associations, local councils and twinning networks in the UK and beyond and is being used to inform planning and future practice.
First Year Of Impact 2021
Sector Communities and Social Services/Policy,Other
Impact Types Cultural,Societal,Policy & public services

 
Description Blog for The Conversation 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact This blog presents some reflections on 'twinning' and 'Brexit', informed by my research to date.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://theconversation.com/challenging-national-governments-why-twinning-towns-is-inherently-politi...
 
Description Blog for The Conversation 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact One of the oldest North-South community links surveyed as part of this project is the relationship between Gunjur (Gambia) and Marlborough (UK). This link, alongside a handful of others, inspired a burgeoning movement of links for sustainable development, which grew from strength to strength from the mid-1980's to the early 2000's. In 2019, I visited Marlborough and Gunjur to ask representatives of the community about the strengths, weaknesses, hopes and aspirations for the link after so many years. One of the things that came across strongly during the conversations I had in Gunjur was local opposition to a new fishmeal factory that had built on the beach. I documented the environmental protests in a blog for The Conversation, sharing this with the linking partners back in Marlborough.
Together with British and Gambian partners have since developed plans to run a piece of arts based action research with young people from Marlborough and Gunjur during Aug 2020 which will feature discussion on the environment and climate change.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2019
URL https://theconversation.com/profiles/holly-eva-ryan-128929/dashboard#
 
Description Blog for the LSE Latin America and Caribbean Centre 
Form Of Engagement Activity Engagement focused website, blog or social media channel
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact Twinnings are established for a wide variety of reasons. Whilst many of the examples that I examine in depth for this project are civil society-led initiatives, sometimes twinning is a more straightforward reflection of geopolitics and state extractivism. One of the recent twinnings that I surveyed as part of this project was the 2019 link between Georgetown (Guyana) and Aberdeen (UK). This twinning took place against the backdrop of recent oil discoveries, which I discuss at some length in the linked blog.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
URL https://blogs.lse.ac.uk/latamcaribbean/2020/02/27/guyana-elections-2020-a-crude-awakening/
 
Description Global Politics Unbound Podcast 
Form Of Engagement Activity A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press)
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Postgraduate students
Results and Impact I was interviewed about my exhibition LINES as part of the Global Politics Unbound podcast series which is a popular resource for postgraduate students and early career scholars working across the field of International Relations (IR). The interview focussed on my contribution to visual methods in IR, the value of co-production and the curatorial choices we make when presenting research to others.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023
URL https://globalpoliticsunbound.com/podcast-2/
 
Description HAFSA AGM 2020 
Form Of Engagement Activity A talk or presentation
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach International
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact I was invited to present my research on "benefits, challenges and best practices in twinning" to the Hanwell Friends of Sebastiya, a community link between Hanwell (Ealing) and the city of Sebastiya in the Palestinian West Bank. The AGM took place in Hanwell but my presentation was live streamed to a gathering in the partner community of Sebastiya.
The audience totalled 65+. This included organisers, volunteers and supporters of the community link.

There were two main impacts of my talk. Firstly, it generated a stimulating debate about the whether twinning should be seen as a political act or not. It also spurred a process of reflection about what the HAFSA link currently does well as well as what it could do better. Secondly, the talk generated requests for further information and involvement. For example, many members requested a transcript of the talk, which I plan to share. The high degree of interest at this event has prompted me to write a blog for The Conversation, which examines twinning as an expression of politics. Moreover, my talk at HAFSA resulted in an invitation to attend the Britain Palestine Twinning and Friendship Network's AGM in London, an event which attracted representatives from over 40 twinning and friendship links across the UK.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2020
 
Description Radio Interview for Times Radio 
Form Of Engagement Activity A broadcast e.g. TV/radio/film/podcast (other than news/press)
Part Of Official Scheme? No
Geographic Reach National
Primary Audience Public/other audiences
Results and Impact I was interviewed live on Times Radio by Lord Ed Vaizey about my exhibition LINES.
Year(s) Of Engagement Activity 2023