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OverviewFull Product DetailsAuthor: Tatiana Romanova (St. Petersburg State Univesity, Russia) , Maxine David (Leiden University, Netherlands.)Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd Imprint: Routledge Weight: 1.025kg ISBN: 9781138543676ISBN 10: 1138543675 Pages: 482 Publication Date: 26 July 2021 Audience: College/higher education , Tertiary & Higher Education , Undergraduate Format: Hardback Publisher's Status: Active Availability: In Print This item will be ordered in for you from one of our suppliers. Upon receipt, we will promptly dispatch it out to you. For in store availability, please contact us. Table of ContentsIntroduction - Through a Handbook: The Study of EU-Russia Relations Part 1: Evolving Relations 1. The History of Russia-European Union Relations 2. The Dynamics of State and Societal Actors in Russia’s Policy on the EU 3. Intra-European Union Dynamics: The Interplay of Divergences and Convergences 4. The Normative Deadlock in EU–Russia Relations: Hegemony without Influence 5. Ideas and Normative Competition in EU-Russian Relations Part 2: Theories, Methods and Learning 6. Realism and the Study of EU-Russian Relations 7. Power in EU-Russia Relations: More than Meets the Eye 8. (Neo-)Institutionalism 9. Europeanisation 10. Methods of Economic Analysis 11. Constructivism in the Study of EU-Russian Relations 12. The EU-Russia Relationship through the Lens of Postcolonial Theory Part 3: Political and Security Relations 13. The Political and Security Relationship 14. The EU and the Russian Federation and Human Rights: Similar Vocabularies, Opposing Grammars 15. The Human Rights Agenda in EU-Russia Relations: From A Political to Politicised Dialogue 16. Cyber Security in EU-Russia Relations 17. EU-Russian Relations in Justice and Home Affairs: A Mismatch between Form and Content? 18. The Member States in EU-Russia Relations: Drivers of Cooperation and Sources of Conflict 19. Legal Approximation: The Russian Perspective Part 4: Economic Relations 20. Russia-EU Economic Relations: From moderate pull to normative push? 21. EU-Russia Energy Relations 22. Policy of Sanctions in Russia-EU Relations 23. EU–EAEU Common Economic Space 24. EU-Russia Relations in the Science and Technology Field: the Persistence of the Legal Framework in the Context of Selective Engagement Part 5: Social Relations 25. Civil Society in the EU-Russia Relations 26. Building Trust through Academic Cooperation? 27. EU-Russia Cultural Relations and Identity Politics 28. Unsocial Media in the EU and Russia 29. Epistemic Communities in EU-Russia Relations: A Dialogue of the Deaf? Part 6: Regional Relations 30. EU, Russia and the Question of Kaliningrad 31. The Northern Dimension 32. EU-Russian Cross-Border Cooperation, Its Instruments and Programmes 33. Russia and the EU in the Arctic 34. From a ‘Common’ to a ‘Contested’ Neighbourhood: Connecting Levels of Analysis in EU-Russia Interaction Part 7: EU, Russia and Global Governance 35. Russia in the Liberal World Order 36. EU-Russia-US Relations: Diverging visions on European security 37. Russia and the EU in Asia 38. The EU, Russia and the Middle East 39. EU-Russia Relations in Multilateral Governmental Frameworks 40. Unrealised Potential: The EU and Russia in Regional Multilateral InstitutionsReviews"""This collective volume maps, unpacks and takes stock of EU-Russia relations in all their complexity, multiplicity and versatility. It does so in a crisp, balanced, original and authoritative manner, building on its authors’ respective and complementary strengths to make meaningful empirical, theoretical and practical contributions to the study of EU-Russia relations. The authors not only shed light on the past and present of the current crisis; they also reflect on the factors likely to shape this relationship in the future."" David Cadier, Centre for International Studies (CERI) at Sciences Po, Paris, France ""The study of EU-Russia relations is coming of age. This Handbook brings together a representative group of scholars to take comprehensive stock of this maturing field. It analyses the main issues as well as points of divergence, even conflict, and brings badly needed analytical clarity to a relationship currently fraught with problems."" Hiski Haukkala, Tampere University, Finland ""A comprehensive and well-balanced picture of the EU-Russia relations presented by serious scholars from both sides. The book demonstrates the complexity of this uneasy and sometimes controversial relationship, arguing against reductionist black-and-white approaches common on both sides of the European-Russian divide."" Andrey Kortunov, Director General, Russian International Affairs Council, Russia ""Strategic stalemate became a new normal [in] EU-Russia relations. But this is not how Brussels and Moscow imagined a bilateral future almost three decades ago. This volume takes readers on a guided tour through multiple vicissitudes in the complex [EU-Russia] relations. Most importantly, this timely read reveals in great detail why, in spite of enduring economic interconnectedness, sides, over the last few years, fell further apart."" Stanislav Secrieru, European Union Institute for Security Studies" This collective volume maps, unpacks and takes stock of EU-Russia relations in all their complexity, multiplicity and versatility. It does so in a crisp, balanced, original and authoritative manner, building on its authors' respective and complementary strengths to make meaningful empirical, theoretical and practical contributions to the study [of] EU-Russia relations. The authors not only shed light on the past and present of the current crisis; they also reflect on the factors likely to shape this relationship in the future. David Cadier, Centre for International Studies (CERI) at Sciences Po, Paris, France The study of EU-Russia relations is coming of age. This Handbook brings together a representative group of scholars to take comprehensive stock of this maturing field. It analyses the main issues as well as points of divergence, even conflict, and brings badly needed analytical clarity to a relationship currently fraught with problems. Hiski Haukkala, Tampere University, Finland A comprehensive and well-balanced picture of the EU-Russia relations presented by serious scholars from both sides. The book demonstrates the complexity of this uneasy and sometimes controversial relationship, arguing against reductionist black-and-white approaches common on both sides of the European-Russian divide. Andrey Kortunov, Director General, Russian International Affairs Council, Russia Strategic stalemate became a new normal [in] EU-Russia relations. But this is not how Brussels and Moscow imagined [a] bilateral future almost three decades ago. This volume takes readers on a guided tour through multiple vicissitudes in the [complex EU-Russia] relations. Most importantly, this timely read reveals in great detail why, in spite of enduring economic interconnectedness, sides, over the last few years, fell further apart. Stanislav Secrieru, European Union Institute for Security Studies This collective volume maps, unpacks and takes stock of EU-Russia relations in all their complexity, multiplicity and versatility. It does so in a crisp, balanced, original and authoritative manner, building on its authors' respective and complementary strengths to make meaningful empirical, theoretical and practical contributions to the study EU-Russia relations. The authors not only shed light on the past and present of the current crisis; they also reflect on the factors likely to shape this relationship in the future. David Cadier, Centre for International Studies (CERI) at Sciences Po, Paris, France. The study of EU-Russia relations is coming of age. This Handbook brings together a representative group of scholars to take comprehensive stock of this maturing field. It analyses the main issues as well as points of divergence, even conflict and brings badly needed analytical clarity to a relationship currently fraught with problems. Hiski Haukkala, Tampere University, Finland. A comprehensive and well-balanced picture of the EU-Russia relations presented by serious scholars from both sides. The book demonstrates the complexity of this uneasy and sometimes controversial relationship, arguing against reductionist black-and-white approaches common on both sides of the European-Russian divide. Andrey Kortunov, Director General, Russian International Affairs Council, Russia. Strategic stalemate became a new normal in the EU-Russia relations. But this is not how Brussels and Moscow imagined bilateral future almost three decades ago. This volume takes readers on a guided tour through multiple vicissitudes in the EU-Russia complex relations. Most importantly this timely read reveals in great detail why in spite of enduring economic interconnectedness, sides, over the last few years fell further apart. Stanislav Secrieru, European Union Institute for Security Studies. Author InformationTatiana Romanova is Associate Professor at St. Petersburg State University and at HSE University, Russia. Maxine David is Assistant Professor at Leiden University, the Netherlands. Tab Content 6Author Website:Countries AvailableAll regions |