Russia Abroad (e-bog) af -
Ohanyan, Anna (redaktør)

Russia Abroad e-bog

473,39 DKK (inkl. moms 591,74 DKK)
While we know a great deal about the benefits of regional integration, there is a knowledge gap when it comes to areas with weak, dysfunctional, or nonexistent regional fabric in political and economic life. Further, deliberate &quote;un-regioning,&quote; applied by actors external as well as internal to a region, has also gone unnoticed despite its increasingly sophisticated modern application...
E-bog 473,39 DKK
Forfattere Katz, Mark (medforfatter), Ohanyan, Anna (redaktør)
Udgivet 1 oktober 2018
Længde 220 sider
Genrer History of scholarship (principally of social sciences and humanities)
Sprog English
Format pdf
Beskyttelse LCP
ISBN 9781626166219
While we know a great deal about the benefits of regional integration, there is a knowledge gap when it comes to areas with weak, dysfunctional, or nonexistent regional fabric in political and economic life. Further, deliberate "e;un-regioning,"e; applied by actors external as well as internal to a region, has also gone unnoticed despite its increasingly sophisticated modern application by Russia in its peripheries. This volume helps us understand what Anna Ohanyan calls "e;fractured regions"e; and their consequences for contemporary global security. Ohanyan introduces a theory of regional fracture to explain how and why regions come apart, consolidate dysfunctional ties within the region, and foster weak states. Russia Abroad specifically examines how Russia employs regional fracture as a strategy to keep states on its periphery in Eurasia and the Middle East weak and in Russia's orbit. It argues that the level of regional maturity in Russia's vast vicinities is an important determinant of Russian foreign policy in the emergent multipolar world order. Many of these fractured regions become global security threats because weak states are more likely to be hubs of transnational crime, havens for militants, or sites of protracted conflict. The regional fracture theory is offered as a fresh perspective about the post-American world and a way to broaden international relations scholarship on comparative regionalism.