Russian foreign policy in Eurasia : national interests and regional integration /
Saved in:
Author / Creator: | Arakelyan, Lilia A., author. |
---|---|
Imprint: | Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, an imprint of the Taylor & Francis Group, 2018. |
Description: | xvi, 148 pages ; 24 cm. |
Language: | English |
Series: | Post-Soviet politics Post-Soviet politics. |
Subject: | |
Format: | Print Book |
URL for this record: | http://pi.lib.uchicago.edu/1001/cat/bib/11345089 |
Table of Contents:
- After the collapse
- Russia's foreign policy in the South Caucasus since 1991
- How do the South Caucasian cases affect the analysis of Russia's foreign policy?
- Examining Moscow's international relations from a pluralist perspective
- The perplexing power of Russia's relations with its neighbors
- The constructivist moment in Russian post-Soviet foreign policy
- Am I a trembling creature, or do I have the right?
- Neoclassical realism
- International regime theories
- Eurasian integration vs. European integration
- Conclusion
- Russian foreign policy in the South Caucasus: the logic of historical explanation
- The main theoretical debates about the Russia's foreign policies
- In the South Caucasus and the creation of the Eurasian union
- Russia at the caucasian gates
- The neoclassical realist explanation
- The Caucasus and the Russian empire
- The history of Russia's foreign policy in the South Caucasus
- Catherine the Great and the national interest of Russia
- Tsarist expansion into the South Caucasus
- The South Caucasus on the eve of the creation of USSR
- The rise of nationalism in the South Caucasus
- Conclusion
- Testing regime theories in the post-soviet space
- The realist explanation of the creation of the Union of Soviet Socialist Republics
- The first pancake is always lumpy
- Interest-based theories of international regime
- From the customs union to the Eurasian Union
- Keohane's contractualist theory-not all regimes are created equally
- The structure, function and effect of the Eurasian economic union
- The functional theory falsifies Russia's foreign policy in the South Caucasus
- Conclusion
- Conclusion: did Russia restore its hegenomy in Eurasia?
- Russian foreign policy in the South Caucasus explained
- Russian policy towards Armenia
- Why Armenia joined the Eurasian union
- Russian policy toward Azerbaijan
- Russian policy toward Georgia
- Explaining variables
- Alternative theory international regime theories rejected
- Limitations and recommendations for future research
- The future of the South Caucasus.