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ID:
180305
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Summary/Abstract |
The deadly skirmishes along the disputed border of Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan in late April 2021 stand out in comparison to other recent clashes between residents of this remote area. This article analyzes the 2021 border conflict. Furthermore, it stands to reason that the current political climate serves to hinder any resolution to this interstate dispute. Lastly, since skirmishes between Kyrgyzstan and Tajikistan (both members of the Collective Security Treaty Organization) serve as a source of potential embarrassment for the Russian Federation, Moscow will seek to assert its leverage, in the hopes of avoiding future clashes and maintaining its hegemony over Central Asia.
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2 |
ID:
089110
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Publication |
2009.
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Summary/Abstract |
Stranger to history is a difficult to review, perhaps because it is difficult to really understand what one should make of it.
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3 |
ID:
151203
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Summary/Abstract |
Glorification of ‘self’ (Western civilisation) at the expense of the ‘other’ (eight civilisations) was inherent in Huntington’s Clash of Civilizations thesis. The ‘other’ civilisations identified—as the non-self and situated mostly in the Global South—were clubbed together as the Rest, irrespective of their pluralism. Building on Huntington’s binaries—the West and the Rest—this article makes an attempt to reflect on similarities within the perceived differences. Even though his civilisations appear different, they are in many ways similar due to interactions, colonisation and globalisation. Their relationship has become complicated; Western civilisation cannot do without civilisations from the Global South. Hence, there can be no perpetual or fixed enemy nor can all relationships be suspended with the ‘other’ in a globalising world.
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4 |
ID:
086309
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Publication |
2008.
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Summary/Abstract |
The West used to be one of those stable concepts that oriented the Westerners in their various activities around the world. Today it is a concept challenged from several sides. Through an overview of the basic historical meanings of the concept, this article focuses on the points of contestation and possible changes regarding the concept of the West. The most important challenge to the concept has been made by a debate over the actual status of the transatlantic relationship. Whereas the existence of a political West is strongly questioned within the debate over a possible transatlantic divide, there seems to be a parallel move in the reverse direction when the concept is used in opposition to Islam. Although the idea of a clash of civilizations is dismissed by many, it still plays an important role in reviving the West as a cultural and civilizational entity. We are thus witnessing an internal dismantling of the West alongside an external rearming of the concept.
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