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Full Description
The Silk Road After Ukraine: A New Vision for Eurasian Integration explores the long-term implications of Russia's invasion of Ukraine on Eurasian supply chains and Eurasia's development trajectory. Through an in-depth examination of China's original motivations for launching the New Silk Road, contextualized with the potential impacts on other players along the trade corridor, this book assesses how states that were largely left out of the pre-invasion may capitalize on the new opportunities brought about by divestment in supply chains that traverse Russian and Belarusian territory. Rather than focusing exclusively on state actors, Nathan Mark Hutson also examines the role of regional and private sector players in creating coalitions for corridor prioritization. This book further illustrates why the liberation and restoration of Ukraine's ports, along with a guarantee of freedom of commerce in the Black and Caspian Seas, are essential factors for the successful development of Eurasia as a dynamic trade space.
Contents
Acknowledgments
Introduction
Chapter 1: Initial Bargaining Positions
Chapter 2: The BRI in the Context of Eurasia's Post-1960 Trade Trajectory: A Supercontinent Split in Two
Chapter 3: The Belt and Road Initiative Prior to Ukraine: Connectivity and Infrastructure Gaps
Chapter 4: Analysis of Silk Road Development Needs and Geospatial Analysis of Eurasian Firms in Reference to BRI Corridors
Chapter 5: Political and Institutional Checks on Integration
Chapter 6: The New Beneficiaries of the Middle Corridor
Chapter 7: Returning the Silk Road to Ukraine
Bibliography
About the Author



