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ID118758
Title ProperCentral Asia as seen from Russia
LanguageENG
AuthorLaumulin, Murat
Publication2012.
Summary / Abstract (Note)This is a survey of what has been written in Russia about Central Asia, of the subject range and scope of problems that our Russian colleagues have discussed in their works, and of what they think about the region's future. For obvious reasons, the Russian public as a whole and political scientists and politicians as its part cannot remain indifferent to what is going in Central Asia. Until quite recently, Russia and Central Asia were parts of a single state; today they remain tied together by geographic and geopolitical proximity. For these reasons, the region is still part of Russia's information expanse.
The Russian Federation, which has scored quite a few foreign policy successes, is still facing old and persisting problems and is coping with the new challenges that crop up in the contemporary world. The integration initiatives formulated by Russia are hailed by some of its post-Soviet partners and rejected (or even undermined) by others.
`In' analytical NoteCentral Asia and the Caucasus Vol. 13, No.4; 2012: p.106-119
Journal SourceCentral Asia and the Caucasus Vol. 13, No.4; 2012: p.106-119
Key WordsRussia ;  Central Asia ;  Political Scientists ;  Foreign Policy ;  Political Rival ;  Central Asian policy