Russia–EU Relations and the Common Neighborhood

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A01=Irina Busygina
Author_Irina Busygina
Authority
authority versus coercion
Category=JP
Category=JPSN
Category=JW
Cee Country
Coercion
EEU
eq_bestseller
eq_isMigrated=1
eq_isMigrated=2
eq_nobargain
eq_non-fiction
eq_society-politics
EU
EU External Relation
EU Global Strategy
EU Russia neighbourhood conflicts
EU Russia Relationship
EU Sanction
EU Turkey Relation
EU Turkish Relation
EU's Acquis Communautaire
EU's Approach
EU's Attempt
EU's Eastern Enlargement
EU's External Action
EU's Foreign Policy
EU's Interest
EU's Normative Power
EU's Political Conditionality
EU's Security Policy
EU's Trade Partner
Eurasian Economic Union
EU’s Acquis Communautaire
EU’s Approach
EU’s Attempt
EU’s Eastern Enlargement
EU’s External Action
EU’s Foreign Policy
EU’s Interest
EU’s Normative Power
EU’s Political Conditionality
EU’s Security Policy
EU’s Trade Partner
foreign policy analysis
international relations theory
NATO Warsaw Summit
NATO's Air War
NATO’s Air War
Neighbourhood
post-Soviet states
power dynamics
regional security studies
Relations
Russia
Russia EU Relation
South Ossetia
Turkey's EU Accession Negotiation
Turkey’s EU Accession Negotiation

Product details

  • ISBN 9781032096612
  • Weight: 367g
  • Dimensions: 156 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 30 Jun 2021
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
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Examining Russia–EU relations in terms of the forms and types of power tools they use, this book argues that the deteriorating relations between Russia and the EU lie in the deep differences in their preferences for the international status quo. These different approaches, combined with economic interdependence and geographic proximity, means both parties experience significant difficulties in shaping strategy and formulating agendas with regards to each other.

The Russian leadership is well aware of the EU’s "authority orientation" but fails to reliably predict foreign policy at the EU level, whilst the EU realizes Russia’s "coercive orientation" in general, but cannot predict when and where coercive tools will be used next. Russia is gradually realizing the importance of authority, while the EU sees the necessity of coercion tools for coping with certain challenges. The learning process is ongoing but the basic distinction remains unchanged and so their approaches cannot be reconciled as long as both actors exist in their current form.

Using a theoretical framework and case studies including Belarus, Georgia and Ukraine, Busygina examines the possibilities and constraints that arise when the "power of authority" and the "power of coercion" interact with each other, and how this interaction affects third parties.

Irina Busygina is Professor of Politics at the National Research University "Higher School of Economics" in St. Petersburg. She was previously Professor of Comparative Politics at Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO) and European Studies Institute at MGIMO. She also heads the Centre for Regional Political Studies at MGIMO. Her main spheres of research include EU–Russia relations, regional development and regional policy in Russia and the EU (comparatively) and also federalism in the EU and Russia. Over the last several years she has conducted extensive research—both individually and with co-authors—connecting challenges of globalization for the Russian domestic and foreign policies with the need for political modernization. Her most recent book is Political Modernization of the State in Russia, published in 2012 by Liberal Mission Foundation (in Russian, with Mikhail Filippov).

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