Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
Russia's Turn to the East: A Postcolonial Perspective. / Худолей, Константин Константинович; Ланко, Дмитрий Александрович.
в: Stosunki Miedzynarodowe / International Relations, Том 54, № 2, 2018, стр. 31-50.Результаты исследований: Научные публикации в периодических изданиях › статья › Рецензирование
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TY - JOUR
T1 - Russia's Turn to the East: A Postcolonial Perspective
AU - Худолей, Константин Константинович
AU - Ланко, Дмитрий Александрович
PY - 2018
Y1 - 2018
N2 - If assessed within the framework of a postcolonial approach to international relations, the debate about the current “turn to the East” in Russia’s foreign policy can be reduced to the question of whether Russia, a rising power itself, is seeking cooperation with rising Asian powers that is grounded in mutual recognition as equal strategic partners or whether Russia is seeking easy tactical domination over its Asian partners in order to improve its international performance vis-à-vis Western powers. This article references attempts of the former kind as a “turn to the East”, and those of the latter kind as ‘condescension to the Orient’. We look for factors that can influence foreign policy learning among the Russian elite towards recognising Russia’s “Eastern” partners as equally important as its potential Western partners. We pay special attention to changes in the attitudes of part of the Soviet elite in the 1980s, recent changes in the composition of the Russian elite, relations among member states of the Eurasian Economic Union, Russia’s relations with Asian powers like Japan, China and India, and finally Russia’s approach to the situation on the Korean Peninsula. Having examined all those aspects, we conclude that there are factors that can result in a lasting “turn to the East” in Russian foreign policy rather than tactical “condescension to the Orient”, which is predicted to have dramatic consequences for Russia itself.
AB - If assessed within the framework of a postcolonial approach to international relations, the debate about the current “turn to the East” in Russia’s foreign policy can be reduced to the question of whether Russia, a rising power itself, is seeking cooperation with rising Asian powers that is grounded in mutual recognition as equal strategic partners or whether Russia is seeking easy tactical domination over its Asian partners in order to improve its international performance vis-à-vis Western powers. This article references attempts of the former kind as a “turn to the East”, and those of the latter kind as ‘condescension to the Orient’. We look for factors that can influence foreign policy learning among the Russian elite towards recognising Russia’s “Eastern” partners as equally important as its potential Western partners. We pay special attention to changes in the attitudes of part of the Soviet elite in the 1980s, recent changes in the composition of the Russian elite, relations among member states of the Eurasian Economic Union, Russia’s relations with Asian powers like Japan, China and India, and finally Russia’s approach to the situation on the Korean Peninsula. Having examined all those aspects, we conclude that there are factors that can result in a lasting “turn to the East” in Russian foreign policy rather than tactical “condescension to the Orient”, which is predicted to have dramatic consequences for Russia itself.
KW - Russia, postcolonialism, foreign policy-making, Eurasian Economic Union, Japan, China, India, Korea
U2 - 10.7366/020909612201802
DO - 10.7366/020909612201802
M3 - Article
VL - 54
SP - 31
EP - 50
JO - Stosunki Miedzynarodowe / International Relations
JF - Stosunki Miedzynarodowe / International Relations
SN - 0209-0961
IS - 2
ER -
ID: 86650299