𝔖 Scriptorium
✦   LIBER   ✦

📁

Contemporary Russian Messianism and New Russian Foreign Policy

✍ Scribed by Maria Engström.


Tongue
English
Leaves
26
Category
Library

⬇  Acquire This Volume

No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.

✦ Synopsis


Contemporary Security Policy, 2014, Vol.35, No.3, pp.356 - 379.

This article aims to explore the connection between the new 2013 Foreign Policy Concept of the Russian Federation and Christian messianism in contemporary Russian intellectual thought. The ‘conservative turn’ in Russian politics is associated with the return to the cultural and political ideologeme of Katechon, which is proposed by several right-wing intellectuals as the basis for the Russia’s new state ideology and foreign and security policy. The theological concept of Katechon (from the Greeko´Kat1´xvn, ‘the withholding’) that protects the world from the advent of the Antichrist originates in the Byzantine Empire. In Russian tradition, this concept is presented in the well-known doctrine of Moscow as the Third Rome, dating back to the 16th century. The term ‘Katechon’ in contemporary Russian political discourse is relatively new and can be traced to the post-Soviet reception of Carl Schmitt’s political theology. The concept of Russia as Katechon is directly connected to the national security and defence policy, because it is used as the ideological ground for the new wave of militarization and anti-Western sentiment, as well as for Russia’s actions during the Ukrainian crisis. This analysis puts the internal political and cultural debate on Russia’s role in international affairs and its relations with the West into historical perspective and demonstrates the right-wing intellectual circles’ influence on the Kremlin’s new domestic and foreign policy.

✦ Subjects


Международные отношения;Международные отношения;Внешняя политика России


📜 SIMILAR VOLUMES


Misunderstanding Russia: Russian Foreign
✍ Magda Leichtova 📂 Library 📅 2014 🏛 Ashgate Pub Co 🌐 English

Well argued and balanced, Leichtova provides an alternative and more constructive understanding of what drives Russian foreign policy. The book is based on the concepts of constructivism and orientalism in international relations to analyse the policies of the Russian Federation. This book highli

The Multilateral Dimension in Russian Fo
✍ Elana Wilson Rowe, Stina Torjesen 📂 Library 📅 2008 🏛 Routledge 🌐 English

This book examines the place of multilateralism in Russia’s foreign policy and Russia’s engagement with multilateral institutions. Throughout the post-Soviet period, both Yeltsin and Putin consistently professed a deep attachment to the principles of multilateralism. However, multilateralism as a va

Russia in the Indo-Pacific: New Approach
✍ Gaye Christoffersen (editor) 📂 Library 📅 2021 🏛 Routledge 🌐 English

<p>This volume zones in on Russia’s relations with the Indo-Pacific region through the lens of theoretical pluralism, presenting alternatives to the mainstream Realist view of Russia as a major power using geopolitical strategies to establish itself. </p><p>Russia in the Indo-Pacific is an understud

Russia in the Indo-Pacific: New Approach
✍ Gaye Christoffersen 📂 Library 📅 2021 🏛 Routledge 🌐 English

This volume zones in on Russia’s relations with the Indo-Pacific region through the lens of theoretical pluralism, presenting alternatives to the mainstream Realist view of Russia as a major power using geopolitical strategies to establish itself. Russia in the Indo-Pacific is an understudied top

Ukraine: Post-Revolution Energy Policy a
✍ Olena Viter, Rostyslav Pavlenko, Mykhaylo Honchar 📂 Library 📅 2006 🌐 English

This report looks at how the new Ukrainian government plans to decrease Russian influence over Ukraine's energy sector. President Viktor Yushchenko has declared goals which include the diversification of oil and gas supply sources, the reform of the domestic market, and the creation of a strategic o

Russia and the Balkans: Inter-Balkan riv
✍ Andrew Rossos 📂 Library 📅 1981 🏛 University of Toronto Press 🌐 English

Russia had traditionally been attracted to the Balkan region for strategic, ideological, and economic reasons. This volume presents an objective diplomatic history focused on five crucial years in the relations between Russia and the Balkan states from the Annexation Crisis of 1908-9 to the outbreak