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Srl | Item |
1 |
ID:
118607
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Publication |
2012.
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Summary/Abstract |
As the center of gravity in global development shifts towards the Asia-Pacific region, the political significance of Central Asia as Eurasia's geopolitical core increases. China's rapidly evolving cooperation with this region becomes increasingly tight. But what interests lie behind this process? And how lasting can such cooperation be?
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2 |
ID:
147735
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Summary/Abstract |
Cooperation and interaction between Russia and China, based on equitable and constructive partnership, over the past twenty years have become truly strategic and all-embracing, both rhetorically and practically. The formula "forever friends, never enemies" succinctly but vividly conveys the general political vision of what Russian-Chinese relations should be like now and in the future, and contains a kind of genotype of these relations.
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3 |
ID:
144949
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Summary/Abstract |
What has the Shanghai Cooperation Organization (SCO) done to benefit its operation over the past fifteen years? During this time the SCO has experienced vigorous and extensive growth. It has launched a variety of diversified mechanisms intended to promote concerted action along three main lines-security and stability, trade and economics, and culture and humanitarian affairs. While the SCO has not been as effective in all of these spheres as it planned initially, its geographic expansion has been unexpectedly rapid. In addition to six founding states (Kazakhstan, Kyrgyzstan, China, Russia, Tajikistan, and Uzbekistan), the SCO now includes six observer countries (Afghanistan, Belarus, India, Iran, Mongolia, and Pakistan) and six dialogue partners (Azerbaijan, Armenia, Cambodia, Nepal, Turkey, and Sri Lanka). The SCO has won wide international acclaim, of which its observer status at the UN General Assembly is unmistakable evidence.
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4 |
ID:
117183
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5 |
ID:
151261
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Summary/Abstract |
The author examines the results of the 15-year activity of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, its structure, and relations between its members. He also analyzes its role in the region and partnership problems, and forecasts the organization's development prospects in the currently unfolding new world order.
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6 |
ID:
124202
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Publication |
2013.
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Summary/Abstract |
The situation in the South China Sea has lately been acquiring the trappings of a Pacific-scale risk area. So far, though, no one ventures to cross the red line. All signs are that it is more than the territorial disputes between China and several Southeast Asian member countries of ASEAN. In more than one sense, the South China Sea problem is an issue reverberating beyond the regional borders.
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