Academic literature on the topic 'Regionalism – Russia'

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Journal articles on the topic "Regionalism – Russia"

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Achkasov, Valery. "Ethnic factor in the regional policy of Russia Bookreview: Shabaev Y. P., Omarov M. A. Regionalism and ethnicity in Russia: historical evolution and modern political practices. Moscow: Russian State University for the Humanities Publ., 2021. 513 p." Political Expertise: POLITEX 18, no. 3 (2022): 331–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.21638/spbu23.2022.307.

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The monograph under review is devoted to the study of Russian regionalism. The authors consider its various historical forms and come to the conclusion that the formation and expansion of the Russian state inevitably strengthened the regionalist forms of state administration and interaction between the central government and the regions. At the same time, the authors prove that in the history of Russia, regionalization and centralization were not mutually exclusive, but complementary directions of development. The ethnic factor has always played a significant role in regional politics, so the focus of the work is on the consideration of the ideology and political practices associated with ethnic regionalism. A significant place in the monograph is occupied not only by a description of the origins and political evolution of regionalist ideas in Russia, but also by an analysis of the features of Soviet and post-Soviet ethnic regionalism. The need to improve regional policy in modern Russia is convincingly substantiated. Indeed, in modern conditions, there is a need for a new type of partnership between the federal center and the regions of the Russian Federation, and, in fact, the response to the coronavirus pandemic laid the foundation for developing a model for quickly countering new risks, primarily by combining the efforts of federal and regional authorities. The conclusions formulated by the authors are convincingly supported by the study of a number of cases: the republics of the North Caucasus, the Finno-Ugric republics of the Russian Federation, the Republic of Tatarstan, the modern Russian "regionalism", the Republic of Crimea.
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Likhomanov, Igor V. "Siberian Regionalism and Eurasianism: Complicated Relationships." Eurasian Crossroads 1, no. 1 (June 21, 2020): 010310006. http://dx.doi.org/10.55269/eurcrossrd.1.010310006.

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Siberian regionalism movement is discussed in the paper in relation to classical Eurasianism of the 1920s. the political differences between Siberian regionalism and Eurasianism were by no means accidental. They were a consequence of deep theoretical differences. The Siberian regional concept was based on the idea of Siberia as a separate economic and geographical region, completely different in its natural and climatic conditions from the European part of Russia. The regionalists focussed on the geographical originality of Russian Siberia, as well as its remoteness and isolation from the “metropolitan state” in geographic and economic terms. All this fundamentally contradicted the “Eurasian geography,” which as persistently smoothed out the geographical space of Russia, trying to present it more homogeneous than it really was. The mental maps of the regionalists and Eurasians did not coincide on the basic level: they both saw the geographic space of Russia in different ways, just as they perceived the structure of its economy. The analysis performed in the article may help to evaluate ideological foundations of modern Eurasian political blocks and alliances as well as Eurasian international legal initiatives.
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Sushko, A. V., and K. E. Bezrodny. "V. A. Zhardetsky and Siberian regionalism." Omsk Scientific Bulletin. Series Society. History. Modernity 6, no. 1 (2021): 30–36. http://dx.doi.org/10.25206/2542-0488-2021-6-1-30-36.

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In the context of events of the Russian Revolution and the Civil War in Russia the Omsk cadet Valentin Aleksandrovich Zhardetsky`s views on the Siberian regionalism are considered. He was a one of the main Kolchak regime ideologists. The source for the study is the Siberian periodicals, as well as the testimonies of our hero about the activities of the Siberian regionalists and the connection of the issue of Siberian autonomy with the international situation given to the Omsk Gubchkom on the eve of his execution. The last source is introduced into the scientific turnover for the first time. The authors conclude that the Russian nationalist V. A. Zhardetsky was one of the most consistent opponents of «Siberian selfhood» similar to the Ukrainian nationalism. His arguments about Siberian regionalism are also relevant for modern Russia, which once again faces the potential threat of separatism in Siberia
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Sablin, Ivan, and Daniel Sukhan. "Regionalisms and Imperialisms in the Making of the Russian Far East, 1903–1926." Slavic Review 77, no. 2 (2018): 333–57. http://dx.doi.org/10.1017/slr.2018.126.

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Tracing the emergence of the Russian Far East as a new region of the Russian Empire, revolutionary Russia, and the Soviet Union through regionalist and imperialist discourses and policies, this article briefly discusses Russian expansion in the Pacific littoral, outlines the history of regionalism in North Asia during the revolutionary and early Soviet periods, and focuses on the activities of the Far Eastern Council of People's Commissars (Dal΄sovnarkom), the Far Eastern Republic (FER), and the Far Eastern Revolutionary Committee (Dal΄'revkom). Inspired by Siberian regionalism and other takes on post-imperial decentralization, the Bolshevik Aleksandr Mikhailovich Krasnoshchekov and other regional politicians became the makers of the new region from within. Meanwhile, the legacies of the empire's expansionism, the Bolshevik “new imperialism” in Asia, and the Japanese military presence in the region during the Russian Civil War accompanied the consolidation of the Russian Far East.
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Melchior, Arne. "Russia in world trade: Between globalism and regionalism." Russian Journal of Economics 5, no. 4 (December 20, 2019): 354–84. http://dx.doi.org/10.32609/j.ruje.5.49345.

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The article examines Russia’s participation in world trade and trade policy, using trade data for 1996–2017 and simulations of a numerical world trade model where Russia is divided into domestic regions. Since the mid-1990s, Russia’s foreign trade has grown much faster than the world average. This was accompanied by rapid deterioration in the trade balance for manufacturing, and fast redirection of imports, with more from China and relatively less from others, especially Eastern Europe. Only 1/8 of Russia’s foreign trade in 2017 was with Eastern Europe. This is why Russia can gain more from trade integration with the world beyond Eastern Europe, according to the model simulation analysis. For Russian domestic regions, multilateral liberalization among all countries has a similar effect across all of them, with a welfare gain due to lower import prices. For the commodity-exporting regions of Russia, preferential free trade agreements (FTAs) have a similar impact. For the more industrialized Russian regions, on the other hand, FTAs lead to manufacturing growth, rising wages and higher prices, and a larger welfare gain. According to the model simulations, trade integration promotes industrial diversification, with manufacturing growth also in some commodity regions. The results indicate that external liberalization is particularly important for the central parts of Russia; with Volga and West Siberia generally obtaining the strongest manufacturing boost from trade integration.
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Spartak, A. "Contemporary Regionalism." World Economy and International Relations, no. 1 (2011): 3–15. http://dx.doi.org/10.20542/0131-2227-2011-1-3-15.

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The new trends in the field of regional economic integration, as well as the changing trade and the political configuration of the global economy cannot but affect integration processes within the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS). Russia seems to be somewhat late with the project of a “hard” regional integration involving supranational control formats. The globalization dictates economic feasibility of an open trade and this is increasingly becoming a significant centrifugal factor. Our main task now is to complete as soon as possible the institutional phase of the Customs Union and the Common Economic Space between Russia, Belarus and Kazakhstan. Only after accomplishment of this integration project we can start to position it as a full-fledged subject of the world trade policy. Simultaneously, we must emphasize our interest in expanding and deepening the cooperation with the third countries and their groupings, including the RTS format. The same consideration prompts us to be extremely careful and reserved concerning the prospects of enlarging the Customs Union. The only possible Commonwealth-wide integration project format can be “soft” integration. This supposes the establishment of a multilateral free trade area (MFTA) with the elements contained within the modern economic integration agreements.
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Sevast'yanov, S. "Regionalism in East Asia and Russia." World Economy and International Relations, no. 12 (2008): 102–5. http://dx.doi.org/10.20542/0131-2227-2008-12-102-105.

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Andrews, Josephine, and Kathryn Stoner-Weiss. "Regionalism and Reform in Provincial Russia." Post-Soviet Affairs 11, no. 4 (October 1995): 384–406. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/1060586x.1995.10641409.

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Malanchuk, Oksana. "Social Identification versus Regionalism in Contemporary Ukraine." Nationalities Papers 33, no. 3 (September 2005): 345–68. http://dx.doi.org/10.1080/00905990500193204.

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Because of the historic separation of western and eastern Ukraine under Polish and Russian spheres of influence, respectively, regional subpopulations have been seen as an important factor in Ukrainian politics. Arel and Wilson argue that the division on the all-important “Russian question” in Ukraine (relations with Russia and with the Russian-speaking minority) is increasingly regional: east and south versus the center and west. Hesli calculated the level of russification and industrialization in the various regions of Ukraine and concluded that both, together with geographic location, although interrelated, have their own bearing on variation in public opinion. Markus, however, has argued that despite economic, political and ethnic differences among Ukraine's regions, these differences pose less of a threat to reform than has sometimes been suggested. She further points out that speculation that the Donbass wants to unite with Russia “stems more from Russian claims to the area than from genuine indigenous sentiment.” Miller and colleagues, on the other hand, dispute the notion of regional differences independent of the socio-demographic characteristics of the local populations, challenging the conventional wisdom that there are regional political cultures that supersede any underlying demographic differences. They argue that national, political, economic and class identities represent the important cleavages in post-communist societies. The regional divide in Ukraine is thus not a foregone conclusion but a factor that bears closer examination.
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Novozhilov, A. M. "Political regionalism and regional aspects of transport development in Russia." Scientific notes of the Russian academy of entrepreneurship 20, no. 3 (October 5, 2021): 88–96. http://dx.doi.org/10.24182/2073-6258-2021-20-3-88-96.

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The upward development of the Russian economy determines the growth of production, a change in the specialization of economic activity both in Russia as a whole and in its regions. The scale and problems of the formation of the economy and transport system of the Russian Federation should be considered in the system of territorial and economic division of the country. Integral development of all elements of the national transport infrastructure in the sectoral and spatial dimensions is necessary.
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Dissertations / Theses on the topic "Regionalism – Russia"

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Hartmann, Allison M. "The political and security implications of regionalism in Russia : the rise of regional Tsars?" Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 2001. http://handle.dtic.mil/100.2/ADA396065.

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Thesis (M.A. in National Security Affairs)--Naval Postgraduate School, Sept. 2001.
Thesis advisor(s): Tsypkin, Mikhail. "September 2001." Includes bibliographical references (p. 63-69). Also Available online.
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Hoffmann, Katharina. "Varieties of regionalism : regional organisations in the post-Soviet space." Thesis, University of Birmingham, 2014. http://etheses.bham.ac.uk//id/eprint/5504/.

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This thesis addresses the question of how and why the function of regional organisations varies in different areas of the world. It contributes with insights from the post-Soviet space. A theoretically informed empirical study examines how two former Soviet republics conceptualise the function of two regional organisations: the Commonwealth of Independent States (CIS) and the Organisation for Democracy and Economic Development – GUAM (GUAM). The literature agrees that the two like other organisations in the post-Soviet space do not produce integration or other forms of regional governance. Nevertheless, the member states continue to actively participate in these organisations. The thesis inquires to which end the states continue their membership. The analytical perspective examines how the member states’ conceptualisations of an organisation’s function depend on the domestic political regimes. The thesis considers two members of the CIS and GUAM. One, Azerbaijan, has a hybrid regime with an authoritarian shape. The other, Ukraine, has a hybrid regime with stronger affinity towards democracy. It is argued that policy-makers conceptualise the function of a regional organisation according to the patterns of rule in their domestic political regimes. The ruling elite’s conceptualisation may diverge from the stated function of the organisation, if the stated function is not compatible with the domestic political regime.
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Kim, Seongjin. "Regionalism in the Congresses of People's Deputies of the USSR and Russia : a case study of Siberia and the Russian Far East." Thesis, University of Glasgow, 2000. http://theses.gla.ac.uk/2447/.

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This study is concerned with the influence of regionalism in the Congresses of People's Deputies of the USSR and Russia between 1989 and 1993 and its implications for future reform including the development of federal relations in Russia. In particular, emphasis will be placed on regionalist tendencies developed in Siberia and the Russian Far East. After perestroika, the discussion of federal relations showed varieties of possible developments, ranging from a unitary system to a confederation. Despite these varieties, it appears to be generally perceived that stable and 'genuine' federal relations are required in Russia. However, little attention has been paid to the role of the newly re-emerging political actor, the deputies of the central legislature, who are directly engaged in the establishment of such federal relations. This study reaches three main conclusions. First of all, regional socio-economic disparities affected the attitudes of deputies towards reform, including changes in centre-periphery relations. Secondly, the analysis suggests that at least two main streams of regionalism were developed during 1989-1993: one developed in the Congress by the regional deputy groups, and the other outside the Congresses by regional political leaders. Thirdly, despite growing regionalist tendencies in Russia at that time, regional political actors were not strong enough to initiate a federal structure of their preference, lacking horizontal and vertical coordination. This discussion of regionalism in the Congress leads us to a further conclusion that regional interest articulation was rather chaotic, hampering legislation of policies and thus facilitating the regionalisation of reform. Despite strong regionalist tendencies in some sub-national units, particularly based on ethno-nationalist sentiments, such a development may erode the legacy of reform as well as regional autonomy itself.
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Roqueplo, Olivier. "La Russie et son miroir d'Extrême-Occident : l'identité géopolitique de la Russie ultra-périphérique sous le prisme de l'Oblast' de Kaliningrad. Étude géographique et géopolitique." Thesis, Sorbonne Paris Cité, 2018. http://www.theses.fr/2018USPCF041/document.

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Créée en 1945, la petite oblast’ russe de Kaliningrad est une entité autonome ethniquement russe de la Russie, enclavée depuis la fin de l’URSS entre Pologne, Lituanie & Baltique. Territoire très stratégique depuis sa naissance & à nouveau dans le contexte des rivalités Est-Ouest depuis 2014, elle reste un symbole de la Victoire russe sur le Reich. Tout en portant paradoxalement l’héritage de l’ex-Prusse orientale allemande mais aussi polonaise & balte. Cette enclave est-elle alors une exception dans l’ensemble russe comme le montreraient sa taille, son isolement, sa jeunesse, son histoire ancienne non-russe & la carte,, ou n’est-elle pas plutôt l’archétype d’une Russie ultra-périphérique ethniquement russe? Après une présentation générale, l’auteur considère l’auto-représentation du territoire fédéral dans la culture russe, et d’autre part les représentations territoriales et maritimes locales héritées d’un peuple de marins; puis la politique de construction identitaire uniformisatrice de l’Etat fédéral, & l’identification régionaliste; enfin la perception de Kaliningrad par Moscou & l’OTAN comme un front majeur, & les interrelations très ambiguës entre l’Oblast’ & ses voisins, & il démontre que l’Oblast’ n’est qu’un cas extrême de région russe comparable à celui des extrémités les plus lointaines de la Russie
Created in 1945, Kaliningrad is an ethnically Russian autonomous entity of Russia but locked from its mainland since 1991 between Poland, Lithuania and the Baltic. A very strategic territory since its birth, it has become again a hot spot in the context of East-West new rivalry since 2014 & remains the symbol of the Victory over the Reich, though also claiming Prussian, Polish & Baltic legacy. Is it then an exception within Russia as might show its situation, youth & non-Russian old history, or isn’t it the archetype of an ultra-peripheral ethnically Russian Russia? The author considers the self-perception of the federal territory in Russian culture, & the territorial & maritime local perception of Kaliningrad inherited from its seamen; then the federal policy of uniformizing identity-building, & the regionalist identification; finally the perception by Moscow & NATO of Kaliningrad as a political-military front-line, & the very ambiguous interrelations between the Oblast’ & its neighbours, he shows that Kaliningrad's case is an extreme one but does belong to a peculiar type of Russian region to be compared to Russia's furthermost peripheries
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Cocoru, Mihai. "Reactive regionalism : a comparative historical analysis of Russia-EU interaction within the Black Sea geopolitical environment, 2003-2012." Thesis, University of York, 2014. http://etheses.whiterose.ac.uk/8957/.

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Recent events within the Black Sea geopolitical environment reveal that Russia is taking extreme measures to retain its ‘strategic glacis’. Meanwhile, the EU maintains its vocal promotion of a neighbourhood that should be conflict-free, prosperous and well governed. Even if it is feasible to envision the potential for achieving the EU’s goal of promoting a ring of well governed countries to the East with which it can enjoy close and cooperative relations, in addition to a Russia-loyal near abroad comprised of countries which have ‘space’ as a main characteristic, this thesis argues that the two outcomes are mutually exclusive. Black Sea state leaders have become acutely aware that the nature of the EU makes balancing Russia both possible and impossible at the same time. Positioned within intersecting spheres of influence of a traditional and a modern great power, Black Sea small states are caught in a pragmatic limbo regarding their foreign policy orientation. Borrowing insights from Buzan and Waever (2003) and Neumann’s (2003) region-building approaches, this thesis finds that between 2003 and 2012 the Black Sea geopolitical environment has shifted from an environment sharing a ‘regional security’ logic to a (potentially transitory) ‘region’ per se. Through the case studies of Moldova and Georgia between 2003 and 2012, the thesis makes a cross-sectional historical comparison to put forth an ‘integrated approach’ to understanding how conflict, economic dependence, and foreign policy orientation serve as ‘triggers’ of change in the Black Sea geopolitical environment. The thesis concludes that the Black Sea has generated a new form of regionalism, a ‘reactive regionalism’ characterized by pragmatic responses to traditional and aggressive (albeit predictable) Moscow and the extremely appealing European model, which, however, provides no substantial geopolitical backing.
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Dupuy, Arnold C. "Patterns of Regionalism and Security: Energy as a Transformational Influence in the Black Sea Region." Diss., Virginia Tech, 2016. http://hdl.handle.net/10919/71637.

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One of the more significant regional groupings to have emerged since the collapse of the Soviet Union is the wider Black Sea. Located at the jagged confluence of the Western, Orthodox and Muslim worlds, the region was quite frequently a violent meeting place, and thus instead of a bridge between civilizations, it has been a barrier. Even more compelling is how the presence of oil and gas has thrust the Black Sea into the world's view and contributed to the rush of external interest, and how this has helped develop a unique regional entity. Today, in an interconnected global economy, the region's position as a producer and conduit for fossil fuels makes it impossible to consider in isolation. More importantly, to succinctly define this dissertation's research question, it can be asked how does energy act as a transformational agent in the emergence of a Black Sea region?
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Nikolova, Iskra. "The EU Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region and the Presence of Russia." Thesis, Malmö högskola, Fakulteten för kultur och samhälle (KS), 2010. http://urn.kb.se/resolve?urn=urn:nbn:se:mau:diva-22662.

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The aim of this paper is to reveal how the European – Russian political cooperation in the common Baltic Sea Region developed over the last twenty years, ending up at the recently adopted European Union Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region, which excludes Russian participation. This single case study is divided into two well-defined historical periods: starting from the fall of the Berlin Wall until the Eastern Bloc European enlargement and from 2004 to the adoption of the European Union Strategy for the Baltic Sea region in 2009; where comparison and process-tracing methods are applied to connect different variables that matter for clarifying the current state of relations. Furthermore, the analysis is conducted with the help of Constructivist and Neo-Realist theories for two purposes – to achieve stronger scientific explanation and to avoid too loose interpretation of the events. The results show that the Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region is often seen and understood differently by the various political actors, but consequently this leads to a situation in which the role of Russia in the common region remains unclear. When it comes to defining the Russian position today, the Baltic Sea Region provides a good climate for collaboration but so far, the European Union has failed to recognize that the Russian Federation although with a limited access to the sea, remains an actor that should not be ignored. Russia, as well appears confused about its overall foreign policy towards the European Union. Nevertheless, another significant outcome reveals that the levels of regional cooperation have been continuously increasing over the last twenty years, which is an indicator that the Russian presence did not diminish. Finally, the study suggests the European Union Strategy for the Baltic Sea Region is perhaps the beginning of a new tendency towards macro-regional policy development, which will play a future important role in the international relations.
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Dorjjugder, Munkh-Ochir. "Correlation of identity and interest in foreign policy : implications for Mongolia." Thesis, Monterey, Calif. : Springfield, Va. : Naval Postgraduate School ; Available from National Technical Information Service, 2003. http://library.nps.navy.mil/uhtbin/hyperion-image/03sep%5FDorjjugder.pdf.

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Thesis (M.A. in National Security Affairs)--Naval Postgraduate School, September 2003.
Thesis advisor(s): Edward A. Olsen, Jeffrey Knopf. Includes bibliographical references (p. 141-148). Also available online.
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Andrusenko, Ekaterina. "Transformace sociálněekonomického systému v Ruské federaci se zaměřením na hospodářství Sverdlovské oblasti." Master's thesis, Vysoká škola ekonomická v Praze, 2013. http://www.nusl.cz/ntk/nusl-192563.

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The main objective of this thesis is to evaluate the circumstances and transition of the socio-economic system of the Russian Federation. It is also focused on the regional economy of Sverdlovsk region as a socio-economic subsystem. Uralmash plant is presented here as an example of an economic player in a process of transition. The thesis is based on several specific theories: socio-economic system and its transition, evolution of the economic systems by J. Schumpeter, social choice between chaos and dictatorship based on the new comparative economics, regionalist theory and corporate finance. It is chosen comparative-historical and empirical-statistical methodology. The main finding of the thesis is the inability of the socio-economic system of the USSR to continue in development as a result of dictatorship. However, the new Russian economy fell into a structural shift. The contribution of the thesis is a comprehensive view on transition process in Russia both at national and at regional and local level. Both theoretical and practical sites of transition are reflected. Not only macroeconomic but also microeconomic point of view is taken into account.
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SILVA, Davi Alberto Luz da. "Política externa russa: caminhos para a guerra da Geórgia." Universidade Federal de Pernambuco, 2012. https://repositorio.ufpe.br/handle/123456789/10377.

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Submitted by Marcelo Andrade Silva (marcelo.andradesilva@ufpe.br) on 2015-03-04T14:13:06Z No. of bitstreams: 2 Silva, Dissertação, Vfinal.pdf: 1714348 bytes, checksum: 56103a2fcf5e5780b6b34c658dd51528 (MD5) license_rdf: 1232 bytes, checksum: 66e71c371cc565284e70f40736c94386 (MD5)
Made available in DSpace on 2015-03-04T14:13:06Z (GMT). No. of bitstreams: 2 Silva, Dissertação, Vfinal.pdf: 1714348 bytes, checksum: 56103a2fcf5e5780b6b34c658dd51528 (MD5) license_rdf: 1232 bytes, checksum: 66e71c371cc565284e70f40736c94386 (MD5) Previous issue date: 2012
A Rússia empreendeu um processo de modernização das suas relações internacionais após o fim do período soviético. A transição democrática e econômica do país para maior inserção no sistema internacional do pós-Guerra Fria condicionou o processo de reformulação da posição russa no seu entorno e nas áreas consideradas estratégicas por Moscou. Na política externa, o entrave decorrente do condicionamento estrutural desfavorável levou à modificação na política externa, especialmente no governo Putin. Houve, por conseguinte, a transição de um momento de concessões e adequação à hegemonia estratégica americana, permeado por concepções liberais; para haver, posteriormente, um condicionamento reativo, com amadurecimento da postura perante a esfera internacional, após a constatação de um ambiente negativo, no qual o retraimento da assertividade na política externa, uma vez intensificado, constituiria ameaça aos interesses russos, principalmente no Cáucaso. A Geórgia tornou-se essencial nesse caminho russo de restabelecimento da esfera de influência no entorno. O posicionamento geográfico estratégico desse país transforma-o em ponto de transição e de conflito entre os interesses russos e de outros países. A efetivação da dependência econômica e política na Geórgia consubstanciaram a tentativa russa para o restabelecimento de zona de influência próxima àquela que outrora fora soviética. Os padrões utilizados pela política externa, contudo, revelam inovação no conteúdo e na forma de conduta externa, ao utilizar incisivamente instrumentos de poder duro e brando, ao retomar gradualmente a posição russa de grande potência no sistema internacional.
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Books on the topic "Regionalism – Russia"

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The decline of regionalism in Putin's Russia: Boundary issues. London: Routledge, 2011.

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T︠S︡erpit︠s︡kai︠a︡, O. L. Russia and regionalization of world politics. Berlin: Bossner, 2014.

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P, Herd Graeme, and Aldis Anne 1953-, eds. Russian regions and regionalism: Strength through weakness. London: Routledge, 2002.

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Imagined economies: The sources of Russian regionalism. Cambridge, UK: Cambridge University Press, 2005.

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1951-, Ross Cameron, ed. Regional politics in Russia. Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2002.

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1955-, Stavrakis Peter J., DeBardeleben Joan, Black J. L. 1937-, Koehn Jodi, and Carlton University. Institute of Central/East European and Russian Area Studies., eds. Beyond the monolith: The emergence of regionalism in post-Soviet Russia. Washington, D.C: W. Wilson Center Press, 1997.

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Isakova, Irina Viktorovna. Regionalization of security in Russia. London: Royal United Services Institute for Defence Studies, 2001.

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Makarychev, A. S. Islands of globalization: Regional Russia and the outside world. Zurich: Center for Security Studies and Conflict Research, 2000.

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1961-, Young John F., and University of Toronto. Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies., eds. Federalism, power, and the north: Governmental reforms in Russia and Canada. Toronto: Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies, University of Toronto, 2007.

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1961-, Young John F., and University of Toronto. Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies., eds. Federalism, power, and the north: Governmental reforms in Russia and Canada. Toronto: Centre for European, Russian, and Eurasian Studies, University of Toronto, 2007.

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Book chapters on the topic "Regionalism – Russia"

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Ahmad, Ishtiaq. "Shanghai Cooperation Organization: China, Russia, and Regionalism in Central Asia." In Initiatives of Regional Integration in Asia in Comparative Perspective, 119–35. Dordrecht: Springer Netherlands, 2018. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-94-024-1211-6_6.

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Larin, Victor. "Pacific Russia in the New Regionalism of North Pacific: Cross-Border and Interregional Relations." In The Political Economy of Pacific Russia, 21–51. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2016. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-319-40120-1_2.

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Libman, Alexander, and Evgeny Vinokurov. "The Foreign Policies of Russia and Kazakhstan: Post-Soviet Regionalism and Power Balance." In Holding-Together Regionalism: Twenty Years of Post-Soviet Integration, 181–92. London: Palgrave Macmillan UK, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9781137271136_17.

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Tsygankov, Andrei P. "Eurasian Regionalists." In Russian Realism, 104–24. London: Routledge, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003247647-6.

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Stoner-Weiss, Kathryn. "Federalism and Regionalism." In Developments in Russian Politics 4, 229–50. London: Macmillan Education UK, 1997. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-1-349-25852-9_12.

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Sakwa, Richard. "Federalism and segmented regionalism." In Russian Politics and Society, 353–95. Fifth edition. | Abingdon, Oxon ; New York, NY : Routledge, 2021.: Routledge, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.4324/9781003053569-13.

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Rozman, Gilbert. "Russian Strategic Thinking on Asian Regionalism." In Russian Strategic Thought Toward Asia, 229–53. New York: Palgrave Macmillan US, 2006. http://dx.doi.org/10.1057/9780230601734_10.

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Brusylovska, Olga, and Sergii Glebov. "“Russian World” in the Black Sea Region: The Case of Ukraine." In Baltic-Black Sea Regionalisms, 225–34. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-24878-9_14.

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Furgacz, Przemysław. "Polish-Russian Disputes Over History as an Important Factor in Their Mutual Relations." In Baltic-Black Sea Regionalisms, 187–204. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-24878-9_12.

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Chernov, Igor, Radomir Bolgov, Igor Ivannikov, and Dmitry Katsy. "Russian Identity in the Age of Globalization and Regionalism." In Springer Geography, 77–90. Cham: Springer International Publishing, 2020. http://dx.doi.org/10.1007/978-3-030-58263-0_7.

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Conference papers on the topic "Regionalism – Russia"

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Büyükakıncı, Erhan. "Economic Regionalisation in the Russian Foreign Policy: Is it Possible to talk about the Eurasianist Model of Integration?" In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c04.00680.

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In this paper, we try how the idea of economic regionalism has developed within the framework of the interests of the Russian foreign policy, which adopted a Eurasianist rhetoric for nearly fifteen years. As the trends of globalisation spread over the world after the end of the Cold War period, the regional integration movements also gained speed with different forms and contents. Meanwhile the countries in the post-Soviet geography adopted different political approaches towards regionalisation and globalisation by taking into consideration their own capabilities and interests. At its own side, Russia was in search of integration within the world economy by trying to implement its own regionalist policies both at the level of the CIS area and with the neighbouring countries like China and the EU. The Eurasianist discourse has no doubt such impact on Russian leadership’s choices of partners and orientations for economic regionalisation. At this point, we want to discuss if it is possible to talk about some “Eurasianist model of regional integration” as a new idea which can combine, at one side, the institutional integration process within the CIS area and, at the other, the strong regional cooperation with the Asian economic partners like China. This model can be also Russia’s answer to embrace both globalism and regionalism by preserving its own hegemonic expectations after the Soviet legacy.
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Ergül, Osman. "Regionalism in Russian Foreign Policy and Russian Integration Strategy through Eurasian Economic Community." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2012. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c03.00560.

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This paper aims to analyze how Russia could develop different regional models of economic cooperation in order to integrate better into the world economy. Russia’s new strategy especially after the establishment of the EurAsEC and its perception of regionalism, especially in the context of EurAsEC, is an important issue. This is valid not only for the specific analysis of the current concept of regionalism; but also for identifying the key variables of both the new international order and the changing character of new inter-state relations. With in this context, Russian foreign policies toward former Soviet republics in the areas of economy and energy have significant effects on the formation of a new world order. This article therefore aims at studying the attempts of the integration process within the EurAsEC that can be defined as a unique example combining both the process of old regionalism with the new one. Thus, EurAsEC is also worth analyzing not only for drawing inspiration from the EU; but also for being the only example declaring its ambition in its founding treaty of customs union to become a supranational integration process in the post-Soviet area.
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Erdem, Ekrem, and Halit Mammadov. "Regionalism Tendency in Post – Soviet Countries." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2013. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c04.00698.

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We drew attention in our study to two directions of the growing regionalism in the Post – Soviet countries. The regionalism in the Post – Soviet Space has an indecisive character. A group of the country (Ukraine, Moldova, South Caucasus countries) is evaluating the regionalism as a medium of the integration with global markets and liberal world, but the other group (leading through Russia, Belarus and countries of Central Asia) see the regionalism as a factor, which is against the globalism. We made a conceptional analyze in the first part of our study. The second part of our study contents the implementation. The main these of our study “Regionalism processes in the Post – Soviet space” have been researched and analyzed under the title of Commonwealth of Independent States and Eurasian Economic Union. The foundation of the Eurasia Economic Union with the aim of more supporting of the economically integration in the Post – Soviet countries is a very important example of the new regionalism tendencies. There will be analyzed in our studies the phases of the Eurasian Economic Union – Eurasian Economic Community, Custom Union and Common Economic Space in scope of regionalism concept. It will be also explained the strategically aims of the mentioned regional structure.
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Kuchinskaya, T. "ПРИГРАНИЧНЫЙ РЕГИОНАЛИЗМ КАК ПАРАДИГМА УПРАВЛЕНИЯ РАЗВИТИЕМ ПРИГРАНИЧНОГО РЕГИОНА: ОПЫТ РОССИИ И КИТАЯ." In Perspektivy social`no-ekonomicheskogo razvitiia prigranichnyh regionov 2019. Институт экономики - обособленное подразделение Федерального исследовательского центра "Карельский научный центр Российской академии наук", 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.36867/br.2019.41.46.029.

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В статье развивается идея о приграничном регионализме как парадигме пространственного развития на примере приграничных практик Китая и России. Автор выявляет особенности китайского приграничного регионализма: характеризует основные мозговые центры приграничных исследований и специфические социокультурные практики развития приграничных регионов КНР. На основе сравнительного анализа приграничного регионализма Китая и России разрабатывает рекомендации. In the article the authors idea of border regionalism as a paradigm of spatial development is developed. The author reveals the features of Chinese border regionalism: characterizes the main PRCs think tanks of Border Studies and specific sociocultural practices of border regions development. Based on a comparative analysis of China and Russia border regionalism, the recommendations are developed.
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Manasov, Zamirbek. "Multilateralism versus Regionalism in Eurasia: Theoretical Reasons of Choosing Sides for Kyrgyzstan." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2011. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c02.00319.

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This paper asks whether Kyrgyzstan should take part in the newly established Customs Union among Belarus, Kazakhstan and Russia or in the World Trade Organization (WTO). From the start of the foundation of the new Customs Union there have been deep discussions among the proponents and opponents of organization. This issue attracted extra attention and interest because the new Customs Union includes non-members of the World Trade Organization such as Russia, Belarus, and Kazakhstan. In Addition, the new Customs Union, unlike previous regional trade agreements, has formed a supranational body –the Custom Union Commission - which will decide on Common External Tariffs. Kyrgyzstan is already a member country of WTO and is going to join the new Customs Union. How will this membership work for Kyrgyzstan in short and long-term period? Will the new Customs Union be substitutive or complementary to the WTO in the development of international trade of Kyrgyzstan? Which side would be more beneficial for Kyrgyzstan: membership to a regional Customs Union or to a multilateral WTO? This paper hopes to answer these main questions. This paper will have five sections. Section one will provide a brief introduction. Section two will analyze the development of regionalism and multilateralism in the region. In section three, theoretical compatibility of regionalism and multilateralism will be discussed. Section four will determine what can be proposed for the current situation of Kyrgyzstan according to selected theoretical literature. Concluding remarks will be given in last section.
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Büyükakıncı, Erhan. "The Siberian Factor in the Russian Foreign Policy: Economic Instruments and Geopolitical Games." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2015. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c06.01297.

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In this paper, we try to discuss how the Siberian part of the Russian territory can present advantages and disadvantages for Russian foreign policy. Situated in the center of the Eurasian geography, Siberia offers many economic opportunities and energy reserves as well as a strategic value for Russia, whose population and interests are mostly concentrated in the western provinces. Long considered as an isolated continent for exile for political dissidents, Siberia has become nowadays a center of the economic strategies of the Russian administration, in relation with its foreign policy perspectives. As an energy source for natural gas and oil and transit corridor toward China and Kazakhstan, Siberia is now supported through governmental policies of restructuration and labour migration. This new perspective can lead to a new policy of regionalism in connection with foreign policy interests. For the federal center, there is an unavoidable correlation between the domestic and foreign policy stakes with Siberia’s integration in world and regional politics.
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Пальчикова, Дарья Дмитриевна, and Алексей Иванович Семенов. "OBSERVATIONS OVER REGIONAL WORDS IN THE POETRY OF V. V. PORTUGALOV." In Поколение будущего: сборник избранных статей Международной студенческой научной конференции (Санкт-Петербург, Январь 2021). Crossref, 2021. http://dx.doi.org/10.37539/pb189.2021.47.93.004.

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В статье рассматриваются типы регионализмов, особенности их функционирования в произведениях В. В. Португалова. Многие анализируемые слова принадлежат к группе относительных регионализмов, это связано с тем, что интересующие нас произведения ориентированы на носителей литературного языка - читателей, проживающих в различных районах России. The article examines the types of regionalisms, the peculiarities of their functioning in the works of V.V. Portugalov. Many of the analyzed words belong to the group of relative regionalisms, this is due to the fact that the works of interest to us are focused on native speakers of the literary language - readers living in different regions of Russia.
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De Jesus, Letícia, and Paulo Duarte. "The Geopolitics of Sino-Russian Regionalism in Central Asia: Kazakhstan in Analysis." In International Conference on Eurasian Economies. Eurasian Economists Association, 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.36880/c14.02616.

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Central Asia is often seen as Russia’s near-abroad. Nonetheless, recent years have shown a more active China in quest for resources, stability, and an attempt to build a Eurasian land axis, to allow a faster connection between East and West within China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). Interestingly, both China (BRI) and Russia’s (Eurasian Economic Union) regionalist projects were launched in Kazakhstan, which shows the centrality of this country in the region. We will focus on the geopolitical impacts for Kazakhstan stemming from the overlapping synergies between both the BRI and the Eurasian Economic Union (EAEU). We aim to understand whether this juxtaposition of regional initiatives could be beneficial or cause harm to Kazakhstan’s regional interests. In so doing, we aim at filling in a gap in literature, which has failed to provide a comprehensive assessment of the benefits versus handicaps caused by the overlapping generated by the EAEU and the BRI. Drawing on a qualitative methodology which encompasses primary sources (official speeches and news agencies) and secondary sources (the most respected authors on the field), we argue that Kazakhstan stance vis-à-vis the BRI and the EAEU has been proposedly ambiguous in order to maximize its interests. This being said, the conceptual lens that best serves our purposes is social constructivism. According to it, international relations are best explained by a moderate approach in which states cooperate instead of relying either on a search for survival (as realism defends) or on a utopia of liberal kindness (according to liberalism).
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Reports on the topic "Regionalism – Russia"

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Buichik, A. G. DIVERSITY OF THE HISTORICAL AND CULTURAL HERITAGE OF THE RUSSIAN FEDERATION: CLASSIFICATION AND REGIONALISM. QUESTIONS OF MODERN SCIENCE Vol. 37, 2019, 2019. http://dx.doi.org/10.18411/buichik-ag-doi-9.

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Rodrigues, Gilberto. Política exterior de Bolsonaro: ideología y aislamiento diplomático (2019-2022). Fundación Carolina, September 2022. http://dx.doi.org/10.33960/ac_13.2022.

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La ideología y el aislamiento diplomático no eran expresiones en el léxico de la política exterior brasileña (PEB) en tiempos democráticos pero, entre enero de 2019 y agosto de 2022, periodo que comprende este análisis de la presidencia de Jair Bolsonaro, se inocularon en la diplomacia brasileña. Empoderado por la Administración Trump y debilitado por su derrota, Bolsonaro y su grupo ideológico instrumentalizaron y alienaron la PEB para situar al país en la ola internacional de la ultraderecha conservadora y autoritaria, desligando a Brasil de su diplomacia pragmática, de geometría variable en las relaciones internacionales, con el Sur global y el Norte global, vía alianzas regionales y como miembro de los BRICS (Brasil, Rusia, India, China y Sudáfrica), en tanto actor fiable y previsible en los foros multilaterales, en defensa de la democracia y los derechos humanos. Disruptiva, la PEB de Bolsonaro constituye una deformación en la identidad internacional de Brasil.
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