ID | 167690 |
Title Proper | Coordination and control in Russia’s foreign policy |
Other Title Information | travails of Putin’s curators in the near abroad |
Language | ENG |
Author | Isachenko, Daria |
Summary / Abstract (Note) | This article seeks to challenge the conception of the Russian state as being centred on Vladimir Putin by looking at the actors implementing Russia’s foreign policy in its near abroad. In particular, it explores the activities of curators (kuratory), a term applied in Russia to describe officials tasked with making things work often bypassing, and sometimes competing with, formal institutions. Following the state transformation framework, the argument put forward in the article is that curation (kuratorstvo), as a practice of coordination and control in Russia’s system of governance, can be seen as a manifestation of fragmentation and internationalisation of Russia’s foreign policy making. The empirical basis for this article is a case study of Russia’s policy towards Abkhazia, which Russia officially recognised as a sovereign state in 2008. This article addresses the involvement of curators in their attempts to exert political influence as an expression of fragmentation as well as emerging institutionalised curation in development assistance as a part of internationalisation. |
`In' analytical Note | Third World Quarterly Vol. 40, No.8; 2019: p.1479-1495 |
Journal Source | Third World Quarterly Vol: 40 No 8 |
Key Words | Russia ; Abkhazia ; State Transformation ; Foreign Policy ; Curators |