Making of Eurasia

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Product details

  • ISBN 9781838601379
  • Weight: 300g
  • Dimensions: 154 x 234mm
  • Publication Date: 07 Oct 2021
  • Publisher: Bloomsbury Publishing PLC
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Paperback
  • Language: English
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The Making of Eurasia investigates the multi-layered spectrum of China and Russia’s Eurasian policies towards each other, ranging from competition to cooperation, as well as the role of regional actors in between. The book examines the impact of and responses to the dynamic Sino-Russian interaction in the wake of China’s Belt and Road initiative, focusing on the selected case studies of Kazakhstan, Mongolia and Uzbekistan, but also on inter-regional implications across the Eurasian space. With China’s imprint on inter-regional politics and ambition to make a distinctive Chinese contribution to ‘globalization’ and Russia’s vision of a ‘Greater Eurasia’ in which Moscow stakes out a place for itself as an indispensable power, other regional actors adopt policies that respond to and co-shape the resulting centrifugal forces.

Meanwhile, power shifts are underway on a global plane, as the normative divide between Russia and the West has widened, and as the Sino-American rivalry is intensifying. The book therefore also sheds light on the effects of Eurasian power shifts on global governance in a context where global ‘leadership’ is contested, and in which the US and Europe are re-defining their relationship not only towards a self-confident China but also towards each other. As such, this study will provide valuable insight for students and scholars of Eurasian Asia Studies, Foreign Policy Analysis, and International Relations at large.

Moritz Pieper joined the German foreign service in 2020. Before that, he was a Research Associate at the German Institute for International and Security Affairs (Stiftung Wissenschaft und Politik) in Berlin (2019-20) and Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Salford, Manchester (2016-19). He holds a PhD from the University of Kent and completed his postgraduate studies in Canterbury and Moscow. He is the author of ‘Hegemony and Resistance around the Iranian Nuclear Programme’ (2017).

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