Full Description
Eurasia is neither a juxtaposition of sub-regions - Central Asia, West Europe, East Asia - nor a single, coherent legal system. It mixes sui generis evolutions and mutual influences of its constituent systems. The period of Eurasian countries going their own, national(ist) way in building a legal system (Europe before 1950, Central Asia under Soviet rule, East Asia in colonialisms) has yielded to one when no 'universal' system applies. Regional mechanisms are mutually inspired, for instance the EU and the EAEU; or the OSCE and the CICA.
Chapters are by scholars based in Korea, Kazakhstan, France, China, Russia and Spain. Each sub-region is analysed through a 'main' reference (Kazakhstan, France, Korea) and a 'complementary model' (Russia, China, Spain), within the context of institutional region-building.C
Two factors accelerate change in Eurasian legal systems: national/regional experiences and evolutions influence each other; the world context (crises, sanctions, wars, trade diplomacy...) push even further : no country (or region) can in isolation devise legal solutions to these challenges.
Contents
Part I - Challenges and turmoil in the region: when conflictual dynamics take over from Covid and jeopardize the context of cooperation
Part II - Legal, political and economic impact on commercial institutions (EAEU, EU ...) and cooperation agreements (Silk Roads ...)
Part III - Legal and political impact on security institutions (SCO, CSTO ...): expansion, re-'centration' or deconstruction of great ensembles ?
Part IV - Artificial Intelligence and Big data