The South Caucasus - Between integration and fragmentation


Autoria(s): Chiragov, Fuad; Gasimli, Vusal; Kakachia, Kornely; Karimov, Reshad; Makarychev, Andrey; Mammadov, Farhad; Ögütçü, Mehmet; Pashayeva, Gulshan; Paul, Amanda; Sammut, Dennis; Shiriyev, Zaur; Veliyev, Cavid
Data(s)

01/05/2015

Resumo

The South Caucasus is situated at the intersection of Eurasia’s major transport and energy corridors, making it an important geostrategic region. Traditional regional actors Iran, Turkey and Russia have jostled for influence and power in the region for centuries, and are now faced with competition from the EU, China, the US and NATO. Although Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia have been independent for more than two decades, they still continue to feel the sway, and sometimes threat, of external actors. As a response, the three South Caucasus states have chosen very different geostrategic paths since the collapse of the Soviet Union, leaving the region more fragmented and volatile than ever. In this book, various authors offer a deep and broad understanding of the developments in the South Caucasus, analyse the different foreign trajectories that each of the three state is following, and highlight the impact of external actors’ policies.

Formato

application/pdf

Identificador

http://aei.pitt.edu/64200/1/pub_5598_the_south_caucasus_%2D_between_integration_and_fragmentation.pdf

Chiragov, Fuad and Gasimli, Vusal and Kakachia, Kornely and Karimov, Reshad and Makarychev, Andrey and Mammadov, Farhad and Ögütçü, Mehmet and Pashayeva, Gulshan and Paul, Amanda and Sammut, Dennis and Shiriyev, Zaur and Veliyev, Cavid (2015) The South Caucasus - Between integration and fragmentation. Series > European Policy Centre <http://aei.pitt.edu/view/series/series-seriesEPC.html> . UNSPECIFIED.

Relação

http://www.epc.eu/pub_details.php?cat_id=1&pub_id=5598&year=2015

http://aei.pitt.edu/64200/

Palavras-Chave #common foreign & security policy 1993--(includes CSDP) #EU-US #Central Asia #EU-Eastern Partnership #European Neighbourhood Policy #NATO #Turkey #Russia #Ukraine #Armenia #Azerbaijan #Georgia #China
Tipo

Book

NonPeerReviewed