Russia, the Former Soviet Republics, and Europe Since 1989: Transformation and Tragedy 1st edition by Katherine Graney – Ebook PDF Instant Download/DeliveryISBN: 0190055111, 9780190055110
Full dowload Russia, the Former Soviet Republics, and Europe Since 1989: Transformation and Tragedy 1st edition after payment.
Product details:
ISBN-10 : 0190055111
ISBN-13 : 9780190055110
Author: Katherine Graney
Nearly three decades after the fall of the Berlin Wall, early hopes for the integration of the post-Soviet states into a “Europe whole and free” seem to have been decisively dashed. Europe itself is in the midst of a multifaceted crisis that threatens the considerable gains of the post-war liberal European experiment. In Russia, the Former Soviet Republics, and Europe Since 1989, Katherine Graney provides a panoramic and historically-rooted overview of the process of “Europeanization” in Russia and all fourteen of the former Soviet republics since 1989. Graney argues that deeply rooted ideas about Europe’s cultural-civilizational primacy and concerns about both ideological and institutional alignment with Europe continue to influence both internal politics in contemporary Europe and the processes of Europeanization in the post-Soviet world. By comparing the effect of the phenomenon across Russia and the ex-republics, Graney provides a theoretically grounded and empirically rich window into how we should study politics in the former USSR.
Russia, the Former Soviet Republics, and Europe Since 1989: Transformation and Tragedy 1st Table of contents:
Part one Theories and Histories of Europeanization and the Post-Communist World since 1989
1. From Europhilia to Europhobia?: Trajectories and Theories of Europeanization in the Post-Communist World since 1989
2. Europe as a Cultural-Civilizational Construct
3. Political Europeanization since 1989
4. Security Europeanization since 1989
5. Cultural-Civilizational Europeanization since 1989
Part Two Case Studies
6. Russia: Eternal and Incomplete Europeanization
7. The Baltic States: Successful “Return to Europe”
8. Belarus, Ukraine, and Moldova: Almost European?
9. The Caucasus States: The Endpoint of Europe or Europe’s New Eastern Boundary?
10. The Central Asian States: Not European by Mutual Agreement?
11. Conclusion: The Continuing Influence of the Eurocentric-Orientalist Cultural Gradient on European, Russian, a
People also search for Russia, the Former Soviet Republics, and Europe Since 1989: Transformation and Tragedy 1st:
republics of the former soviet union
russia and the former soviet union
russia and the former soviet union map
russia and former soviet republics map
a former soviet republic