1st Edition

Russian Foreign Policy in Eurasia National Interests and Regional Integration

By Lilia Arakelyan Copyright 2018
166 Pages
by Routledge

166 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

166 Pages 8 B/W Illustrations
by Routledge

How has Russia increased its strength and power over the last 15 years? By what means did the Kremlin bring Armenia back into its orbit? Why did Azerbaijan and Georgia try to avoid antagonizing Moscow? Can we conclude that Russia has restored its sphere of influence in Eurasia? Employing a case-centric research design this book answers these questions by analyzing Russia’s foreign affairs in... Read more

Introduction





Chapter 1. After the Collapse



Chapter 2. How Do the South Caucasian Cases Affect the Analysis of Russia’s Foreign Policy?



Chapter 3. The Perplexing Power of Russia’s Relations with Its Neighbors 



Chapter 4. Russia's Foreign Policy in The South Caucasus: The Logic of Historical Explanation



Chapter 5. Testing Regime Theories in The Post-Soviet Space





Chapter 6. Conclusion: Did Russia Restore Its Hegemony in Eurasia?

Biography

Lilia A. Arakelyan holds a PhD in International Studies from the University of Miami. She has worked on numerous academic and policy-oriented projects, and taught International Studies courses at the University of Miami. Her articles and books chapters focus on Russian foreign policy in the post-Soviet space, different aspects of nationalism, ethno-national conflicts in the South Caucasus, and on international security more broadly.

"President Putin and the Russian leadership are engaged in a massive building project of reassembling ‘Greater Russia’. Drawing mainly on the examples of the Caucasian states, Russian Foreign Policy in Eurasia relates Russia’s current efforts to establish a Moscow-centered Eurasian Union to the long history of Russian imperial domination under both the tsars and the communists. Arakelyan demonstrates most clearly how Moscow draws upon those historical linkages, in combination with current economic and security dependencies, to tie some neighboring states to a new Moscow-centered regional economic and political order, but also the factors that have enabled some states to resist Russian entreaties." - Roger E. Kanet, University of Miami

"Lilia Arakelyan’s book is one of few theoretically-informed studies of Russian foreign policy in the Southern Caucasus. Following a neoclassical realist approach, she argues that Russia is motivated by considerations of regional hegemony and global status. Liberals and constructivists may disagree, but should read the book and seriously consider its arguments." - Andrei P. Tsygankov, International Relations & Political Science, San Francisco State University