Peacekeeping And The Role Of Russia In Eurasia

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14th Army
A01=Clive Archer
A01=Lena Jonson
Author_Clive Archer
Author_Lena Jonson
Category=NH
CIS Agreement
CIS Force
CIS Peacekeeping
CIS Peacekeeping Force
CIS Region
CIS State
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ethnic conflict resolution
ethnic-national entities
Eurasian power
international intervention
legitimacy in peace operations
military intervention analysis
NATO Engagement
NATO Enlargement
NATO Head
NATO Headquarter
NATO Integrate Command Structure
NATO Intervention
NATO Military Authority
NATO Peacekeeping
NATO Procedure
NATO Role
NATO Security Guarantee
NATO's Defence
NATO's Defence Minister
NATO's Defence Planning
NATO's Defence Planning Process
NATO's Integrate Military Structure
NATO's Position
neoimperialism
post-Soviet conflicts
Russian foreign policy case studies
Russian Peacekeeping
security organizations Eurasia

Product details

  • ISBN 9780367282516
  • Weight: 589g
  • Dimensions: 146 x 233mm
  • Publication Date: 13 Sep 2019
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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"As the number of peacekeeping efforts conducted internationally under the aegis of military forces increases, thers is more pressure to resolve the dilemma inherent in all peacekeeping activities-how to combine efficiency with legitimacy. This dilemma is particularly acute in the many conflicts that have mushroomed in the Eurasian region following the disintegration of the Soviet state. Given the history of Soviet Russian repression of ethnicnational entities, can Russia-the USSR's primary heir-be relied on to resolve rather than inflame conflicts in the other post-Soviet states and regions? In order to answer this question, the contributors to this timely volume evaluate the factors that guarantee Russia's intervention in its ""near abroad."" They debate whether Russian ""peacekeeping"" is legitimate according
to international norms or whether it may be a harbinger of ""neoimperialism."" Finally, they explore the origins and effectiveness of Russia's intervention in four cases of regional conflict and discuss the complexities of broader multilateral involvement."

Lena Jonson is Senior Research Fellow and Head of the Russia Research Program at the Swedish Institute of International Affairs, Stockholm

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