Limiting Institutions examines the security threats in Eurasia and the role of institutions in the post-Cold War international environment. It looks at both the crucial aspect of foreign policy as well as a theoretical area of security studies and its impact in the former Soviet States including Rus
Limiting institutions?: The Challenge of Eurasian Security Governance
β Scribed by James Sperling; Sean Kay; Victor Papacosma (editors)
- Publisher
- Manchester University Press
- Year
- 2018
- Tongue
- English
- Leaves
- 305
- Category
- Library
No coin nor oath required. For personal study only.
β¦ Synopsis
This electronic version has been made available under a Creative Commons (BY-NC-ND) open access license. Eurasian security governance has received increasing attention since 1989. The North Atlantic Treaty Organisation, the institution that best served the security interests of the West in its competition with the Soviet Union, is now relatively ill-equipped resolve the threats emanating from Eurasia to the Atlantic system of security governance. This book investigates the important role played by identity politics in the shaping of the Eurasian security environment. It investigates both the state in post-Soviet Eurasia as the primary site of institutionalisation and the state's concerted international action in the sphere of security. This investigation requires a major caveat: state-centric approaches to security impose analytical costs by obscuring substate and transnational actors and processes. The terrorist attacks on the World Trade Center and the Pentagon marked the maturation of what had been described as the 'new terrorism'. Jervis has argued that the western system of security governance produced a security community that was contingent upon five necessary and sufficient conditions. The United States has made an effort to integrate China, Russia into the Atlantic security system via the Partnership for Peace (PfP) programme and the Euro-Atlantic Partnership Council. The Black Sea Economic Cooperation has become engaged in disseminating security concerns in fields such as environment, energy and economy. If the end of the Cold War left America triumphant, Russia's new geopolitical hand seemed a terrible demotion. Successfully rebalancing the West and building a collaborative system with Russia, China, Europe and America probably requires more wisdom and skill from the world's leaders.
β¦ Table of Contents
Front matter
Dedication
Contents
List of contributors
Preface and acknowledgements
List of abbreviations and acronyms
Part I Introduction
Eurasian security governance: new threats, institutional adaptations
Part II Security threats
Contested national identities and weak state structures in Eurasia
Ethnic conflict and Eurasian security
Eurasia and the transnational terrorist threats to Atlantic security
Transboundary water management and security in Central Asia
The geopolitics of Central Asian energy
Part III Institutions of security governance
Geopolitical constraints and institutional innovation: the dynamics of multilateralism in Eurasia
The OSCE role in Eurasian security
Paths to peace for NATOβs partnerships in Eurasia
Russia, the CIS and Eurasian interconnections
The Black Sea Economic Cooperation: what contribution to regional security?
The EU and Eurasia: a bounded security role in a greater Europe
Part IV Conclusion
Reflections on Eurasian security
Select bibliography
Index
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Eurasian security governance: new threats, institutional adaptations / James Sperling -- Contested national identities and weak state structures in Eurasia / Douglas Blum -- Ethnic conflict and Eurasian security / Stuart Kaufman -- Eurasia and the transnational terrorist threats to Atlantic security
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