03503cam a2200373Ii 45000010014000000080041000140200049000550240032001040350022001360400026001580500014001840720026001980720026002240720026002500720017002760820015002932450083003082500019003912640074004103000053004843360021005373370023005583380032005815051712006135200420023256500026027456500042027716500061028136500068028747000042029427100024029847760035030088560086030439781315536934180706s2018 fluab ob 001 0 eng d a9781134994304 (e-book: Mobi)q(e-book : PDF)7 a10.4324/9781315536934 2doi a(OCoLC)1029352964 aFlBoTFGcFlBoTFGerda 4aDK510.764 7aPOLx000000 2bisacsh 7aPOLx011000 2bisacsh 7aPOLx060000 2bisacsh 7aRGL 2bicscc04a327.4722300aRoutledge handbook of Russian foreign policy /cedited by Andrei P. Tsygankov. aFirst edition. 1aBoca Raton, FL :bRoutledge, an imprint of Taylor and Francis,c2018. a1 online resource (456 pages) :b9 illustrations atext2rdacontent acomputer2rdamedia aonline resource2rdacarrier00tchapter PART I: Theories and conditions -- tchapter 1 International norms and identity /rValentina Feklyunina -- tchapter 2 Global (post)structural conditions /rViatcheslav Morozov -- tchapter 3 Power and national security /rElena Kropatcheva -- tchapter 4 Geopolitics /rJohn Berryman -- tchapter 5 Nationalism /rLuke March -- tchapter 6 Petropolitics /rYuval Weber -- tchapter PART II Tools and actors -- tchapter 7 Diplomacy /rCharles E -- Ziegler -- tchapter 8 Natural gas /rBoris Barkanov -- tchapter 9 Intelligence /rMikhail A -- Strokan -- tchapter 10 Military /rValery Konyshev -- tchapter 11 Cyber power /rJulien Nocetti -- tchapter 12 Media and public diplomacy /rGreg Simons -- tchapter 13 The Russian Orthodox Church /rNicolai N -- Petro -- tchapter PART III Directions -- tchapter 14 The United States /rKari Roberts -- tchapter 15 Asia-Pacic and China /rNatasha Kuhrt -- tchapter 16 The European Union /rTuomas Forsberg -- tchapter 17 Central and Eastern Europe /rDmitry Ofitserov-Belskiy -- tchapter 18 The Middle East /rPhilipp Casula -- tchapter 19 The Caucasus /rMaxim A -- Suchkov -- tchapter 20 Central Asia /rMariya Y -- Omelicheva -- tchapter 21 The Arctic /rRobert English -- tchapter PART IV: Organizations -- tchapter 22 The United Nations /rAlexander Sergunin -- tchapter 23 The G20 /rAndrej Krickovic -- tchapter 24 European organizations /rHanna Smith -- tchapter 25 Asian organizations /rArtyom Lukin -- tchapter 26 The Shanghai Cooperation Organization /rMaria Raquel Freire -- tchapter 27 The Eurasian Economic Union /rMikhail A -- Molchanov -- tchapter 28 The Collective Security Treaty Organization /rRuth Deyermond.3 aProviding a comprehensive overview of Russia’s foreign policy directions, this handbook brings together an international team of scholars to develop a complex treatment of Russia’s foreign policy. The chapters draw from numerous theoretical traditions by incorporating ideas of domestic institutions, considerations of national security and international recognition as sources of the nation’s foreign policy. 0aDiplomatic relations. 7aPOLITICAL SCIENCE / General.2bisacsh 7aPOLITICAL SCIENCE / Government / International.2bisacsh 7aPOLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / General.2bisacsh1 aTsygankov, Andrei P.,d1964-eeditor.2 aTaylor and Francis.08iPrint version: z978113869044840uhttps://www.routledgehandbooks.com/doi/10.4324/9781315536934zClick here to view.