ISBN-13: 9789811518942 / Angielski / Twarda / 2020 / 196 str.
ISBN-13: 9789811518942 / Angielski / Twarda / 2020 / 196 str.
Chapter 1: Russia’s Foreign Policy Responding to Global Changes
Sergey Karaganov
Sergey Karaganov, the Dean of the Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs at HSE and Honorary Chairman of the CFDP, deliberates on an evolving Russian foreign policy that has responded to global and regional changes over the past decades. Karaganov is a staunch advocate for Russia to align itself with China, India, Iran and other non-Western powers to construct a constrained multipolar world. The pivot to Asia is intended to also restructure Moscow’s relationship with the West. Russia should prevent a further drift towards a major war among great powers by using its new Eurasian position to mitigate tensions with the West rather than intensify existing conflicts.
Chapter 2: Moving Beyond the Failed New World Order
Fyodor Lukyanov
Fyodor Lukyanov, the editor of the influential journal Russia in Global Affairs and Chairman of the Presidium of the CFDP, posits that a stable international order never established itself after the Cold War – defined as a shared commitment to status quo of the basic rules and organisation of the international system. The post-Cold War world order was intended to transition into a system where the world was no longer divided because of their support for either the US or Soviet Union, and instead come together to resolve the most pressing problems of the world. The Western-centric world order failed as the imperative of preserving the unipolar distribution of power undermined the ability to address and solve the world’s problems. While the unipolar world is coming to an end, a multipolar system has yet emerged. There is a multipolar distribution of power, yet the unilateralism of the unipolar era still prevails. Lukyanov posits that due to its size, geopolitical location, resource potential, great power tradition, and aspirations - Russia finds itself in the middle of the most important trends shaping the next world order. Global demand for a stable and balanced model is intertwined with Russia’s quest for its new international identity. Reassessment of the past quarter of a century is needed in Russia both internationally and nationally to pave a way to the future.
Chapter 3: Russia’s Pivot to Asia
Alexander Lukin
Alexander Lukin, the Department Head, Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs at HSE and Director of the Center for East Asian and SCO Studies at Moscow State Institute of International Relations of the Russian Ministry of Foreign Affairs, explores Russia’s pivot to Asia. While Russia’s pivot to Asia has its successes and setbacks, the pivot is a reality that appears to be ‘irreversible’. Supported by both economic and political strategic interests, Russia has made formidable investments to rewire global value chains by linking itself to the Asian giants. With a growing number of states across the massive continent embracing some format for Eurasian integration, Russia is finding partners to enhance economic connectivity and develop new political realities. The growing sentiment among the Russian political class and society is that the West has less to offer and new opportunities await in Asia. Yet, a formidable struggle awaits as Russia is less experienced in the political, economic and security environment of Asia and nobody is waiting for them with open arms.
Chapter 4: Russia’s Economic Restructuring
Leonid Grigoryev
Leonid Grigoryev, tenured professor at HSE and Russia’s former deputy minister of economics and finances, argues that the Russian economy has continued it historical dependence on export of raw material exports. Russia’s energy curse has been defined by de-industrialisation as energy exports became Russia’s comparative advantage in the free market. The energy curse is now sought to be broken by using revenue from energy exports to finance a domestic high-tech sector and education, instead of using this revenue import technologies and consumer goods. Russia’s was on the path towards modernisation under the policies of Sergei Witte, yet it was disrupted by World War I, the Civil War, purges of the 1930s, World War II, and the collapse of the Soviet Union. Russia’s efforts to climb in global value chains by contributing with the high-value economic activity is now becoming a key component of Russia’s economic and security strategy.
Chapter 5: Technological Developments and Preparations for a New Global Economy
Igor A. Makarov
Igor A. Makarov, Associate Professor at the Department of World Economy of HSE, explores how Russia attempts to develop technological ecosystems similar to US and China. With new technologies set to reorganise economic and military competition, technological platforms are becoming a condition for great power standing. Equipped with its independent digital platforms, Russia is seeking to develop technological preparedness in areas such as artificial intelligence, automation, robotics and various technologies with unpredictable application. While Russia has joined the party late, it has the potential and ambition to establish itself as a leading power.
Chapter 6: Russia as an International Conservative Power
Glenn Diesen
Glenn Diesen, Professor at the Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs at HSE in Moscow and editor at Russia in Global Affairs, assesses Russia’s new soft power in international affairs. The capitalist - communist divide of the Cold War was soon artificially replaced by a new liberal democratic – authoritarian divide in the 1990s. The common rhetoric in the West was that Russia had nothing to offer the world, and it had to emulate the West to become relevant. Instead, Russia has been moving along a conservative path. After the demise of the Soviet Union, the Russian government has unapologetically sought to revive the nation, faith, family, and the traditional to restore an identity and societal resilience. The crisis in Western liberalism, caused by political and economic neoliberalism, has given birth to new political movements that aim to restore the balance between conservativism and liberalism. For these groups, Russia has transitioned from an adversary to a potential ally.
Chapter 7: Energy in World Politics
Elexander Kurdin
Alexander Kurdin, Associate Professor at the Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs at HSE in Moscow, explores Russia’s role in international energy markets. Energy will remain a strategic industry for revenue and influence in the years to come. Russia’s energy resources in the past were seen to be instrumental to retain a voice in Europe and to incentivise political integration. Now, Russia’s energy resources are central to the pivot to Asia and cementing a strategic partnership with China. The dynamics of EU-Russian cooperation and competition also changes as Russia goes from merely seeking to diversify its transit states to diversifying its energy consumers.
Chapter 8: Russia’s National Security Strategy
Maxim Bratersky
Maxim Bratersky, Professor in the Department of International Relations at HSE, analyses the evolution of Russia’s approach to national security since the Cold War came to an end. Efforts to assure national security by integrating with West has come to an end as economic and political dependency has become a vulnerability. Russia’s development of an independent geoeconomic project is aimed to restore symmetry in relations with the West as a source of security.
Chapter 9: The Contemporary World between Integration and Secession: A Challenge for Russia
Ivan Krivushin
Ivan Krivushin, the Deputy Head of the Faculty of World Economy and International Affairs at HSE outlines two major and seemingly contradictory trends in contemporary world politics – regional integration and secessionism. The commonality is the emergence of new political identities that challenge the sovereign state. This trend presents Russia with opportunities by widening the scope for diplomatic manoeuvring, yet it also infers certain challenges by complicating its foreign policy.
Conclusion
Glenn Diesen and Alexander Lukin
It will be concluded that major disruptions in the international system have historically been a catalyst for conflict. Yet, the instability caused by a skewed international distribution of power and weak position of Russia since the Cold War ended makes the current world order untenable. The changes in the world is expected to lay the foundations for a more stable and just world, where Russia emerges as an independent pole in a multipolar system by harnessing political, technological, military, geoeconomic, and soft power.
"This wide-ranging volume presents a range of views from Russia, provided by some of the leading scholars from the region. The book provides a unique insight into Russian thinking, revealing its diversity as well as the over-riding common perspectives."
—Richard Sakwa, University of Kent and Higher School of Economics, UK
“Russia and the Changing World is an excellent summary of the country’s global priorities by leading experts of a top university"
—Andrei P. Tsygankov, San Francisco State University, USA
This book explores Russia’s efforts towards both adapting to and shaping a world in transformation. Russia has been largely marginalized in the post-Cold War era and has struggled to find its place in the world, which means that the chaotic changes in the world present Russia with both threats and opportunities. The rapid shift in the international distribution of power and emergence of a multipolar world disrupts the existing order, although it also enables Russia to diversify it partnerships and restore balance. Adapting to these changes involves restructuring its economy and evolving the foreign policy. The crises in liberalism, environmental degradation, and challenge to state sovereignty undermine political and economic stability while also widening Russia’s room for diplomatic maneuvering. This book analyzes how Moscow interprets these developments and its ability to implement the appropriate responses.
Glenn Diesen is a Professor at the National Research University - Higher School of Economics in Moscow, and an editor at the Russia in Global Affairs journal. His research focuses on the socio-economics of Greater Eurasia and the emerging strategic partnership between Russia and China.
Alexander Lukin is Director of the Centre for East Asian and Shanghai Cooperation Organization Studies, at Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO-University), Head of Department of International Relations and International Laboratory on World Order Studies and the New Regionalism at National Research University Higher School of Economics, Moscow, Russia, and Chair Professor in the School of Public Affairs of Zhejiang University, Hangzhou, China.
1997-2024 DolnySlask.com Agencja Internetowa