Foreign Policy of Russia

Regular price €223.20
A01=Robert H. Donaldson
A01=Vidya Nadkarni
ABM Treaty
Arctic policy analysis
arms control agreements
Author_Robert H. Donaldson
Author_Vidya Nadkarni
authoritarian governance
Boris Yelstin
Category=GTM
Category=JPS
CFE Treaty
CIS Member
Cold War
collective west
EAEU
election interference
Energy Resources
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
Eurasian Economic Union
Eurasian security studies
Foreign Minister Lavrov
Foreign Policy
foreign policy of russia
geopolitical strategy
In Vikramaditya
India Russia Relationship
international security issues
Ivan III
Kremlin
Missile Defense
NATO
NATO Expansion
NATO Force
NATO Membership
NATO Russia Council
post-Soviet international relations
Putin
resource geopolitics
Russia's bilateral relations
russia-china relations
Russian Federation
Russian foreign policy
Russian nationalism
South Ossetia
Soviet
Soviet Foreign Policy
Special Military Operation
Start II
Ukraine
Ukraine crisis
United States
Vladimir Putin
Vladmir Putin
Yeltsin
zelensky

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032399140
  • Weight: 920g
  • Dimensions: 152 x 229mm
  • Publication Date: 26 Oct 2023
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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This text traces the lineage and development of Russian foreign policy with the insight that comes from a historical perspective. Now fully updated, the seventh edition incorporates new coverage of issues including relations with the major powers and with other post-communist states, with an emphasis on tensions with the United States and engagement with Ukraine, Crimea, and Syria. International security issues including arms control, sanctions, and intervention continue to grow in importance. Domestic and regional issues related to natural resource politics, human rights, Islamism, and terrorism also persist. Chronologically organized chapters highlight the continuities of Russia’s behavior in the world since tsarist times as well as the major sources of change and variability over the revolutionary period, wartime alliances and Cold War, détente, the Soviet collapse, and the first post-communist decades. The basic framework used in the book is a modified realism that stresses the balance of power and the importance of national interest, and it identifies several factors (both internal and external) that condition Russian policy. The interpretations are original and based on a mix of primary and secondary sources.

New to the Seventh Edition

  • A new concluding chapter: Russia Openly Confronts the "Collective West".
  • Thoroughly updated coverage of Russia’s bilateral relations with the United States and countries in Europe, Asia, Africa, and Latin America.
  • Expanded discussion of Moscow’s efforts to control the flow of information at home and abroad as it employs Russia’s "soft power" assets.
  • Russian-American relations, especially with respect to continuing interference in the U.S. elections and to U.S. foreign policy concerns in the Far East, Iran, and Syria.
  • The full unfolding of the Ukraine crisis, culminating in Russia’s invasion of Ukraine.
  • Vladimir Putin’s escalated claims of the superiority of Russian cultural values and more openly imperialistic ambitions.
  • Expanded coverage of Russia’s relations with China and India, now in a separate chapter on this "strategic triangle."
  • Greater attention to the impact of climate change on Russian foreign policy, including its heightened activity in the Arctic.
  • Significant new developments in the Middle East including the collapse of the nuclear deal with Iran, the expanded Russian role in the Syrian civil war, and the growing complexity in Russian-Turkish relations.

Robert H. Donaldson is Trustees Professor of Political Science Emeritus at the University of Tulsa. He was educated at Harvard University, and he is past president of both the University of Tulsa and Fairleigh Dickinson University. He also has taught and held administrative positions at Lehman College of the City University of New York and Vanderbilt University and served as an International Affairs Fellow of the Council on Foreign Relations at the U.S. Department of State and as visiting research professor at the Strategic Studies Institute of the U.S. Army War College. Professor Donaldson has written extensively on Soviet and Russian politics and foreign policy and has authored or co-authored five other books.

Vidya Nadkarni is Professor of Political Science at the University of San Diego, where she has taught since 1990. She was educated at St. Xavier’s College, University of Mumbai, Jawaharlal Nehru University-New Delhi, and the University of British Columbia. Professor Nadkarni teaches courses in the area of international relations and foreign policy, and her research interests center on the foreign policies of resurgent (Russia) and aspiring (China, India) global powers. She is the author of Strategic Partnerships in Asia: Balancing without Alliances (2010) and co-editor of Emerging Powers in a Comparative Perspective: The Political and Economic Rise of the BRIC Countries (2012) and Challenge and Change: Global Threats and the State in the 21st Century (2016).