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基本説明
Asks whether the European project is feasible, desirable, or even ethical choice for Russia.
Full Description
Russia has never been able to escape its relationship with Europe, or Europe with Russia. Geography and history have conspired to make them both neighbors and unavoidable factors in each other s daily lives. From the early 1700s until the collapse of the Soviet Union in 1991, Europe and Moscow both relied on material power to balance against any threats emerging from East and West. More recently, Europe and the EU have adopted a different strategy: make Russia non-threatening by making it European, like "us." Meanwhile, Russia s resistance to Europe s assimilationist mission is increasingly robust, fuelled by energy exports to Europe and the world. Contributors to this volume wrestle with the question of whether the European project is feasible, desirable, or even ethical.
Contents
Introduction- T. Hopf PART ONE: RUSSIA AND EUROPE, HISTORICALLY SPEAKING Russia's Standing as a Great Power, 1494-1815- I. Neumann A Norm-Maker or a Norm-Taker? The Changing Normative Parameters of Russia's Place in Europe - H. Haukkala PART TWO: RUSSIA AND EUROPE, MAKING POLICY Russian Foreign Policy Decision Making on Europe- A. Sergunin EU Foreign Policy-Making and Russia: From Community Building to Interest Building?- G. Timmins PART THREE: RUSSIA AND EUROPE: RELATIONSHIP UNDER CONSTRUCTION Russia's Creeping Challenge to European Norms: European Cooperation and Abolition of the Death Penalty in Russia- S. Saari Pan-European/International Transport Corridors at the Conjunction of Geography and Politics in Russia- K. Pynnoniemi PART FOUR: RUSSIA AND EUROPE: THREE POSSIBLE CONCLUSIONS Theories of Integration and the Limits of EU-Russian Relations- C. Pursiainen Boundaries of Sovereignty, Frontiers of Integration: Rethinking 'Conflict' Between Russia and the EU- V. Kononenko The Stalemate in EU-Russia Relations: Between 'Sovereignty' and 'Europeanisation'- S. Medvedev