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POST SOVIET STATE (2) answer(s).
 
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1
ID:   122826


EU – Russia strategic partnership: challenging the normative argument / Casier, Tom   Journal Article
Casier, Tom Journal Article
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Publication 2013.
Summary/Abstract Russia-EU relations have often been presented in terms of a normative gap, with the EU appearing as a normative and Russia as a non-normative actor. This article critically analyses this 'normative argument' which sees this gap as the cause of tensions. Pleading for a less dichotomous approach to norms and interests, it challenges the normative argument on the basis of the assumed congruence between the norm-driven input and norm-promoting output of European foreign policy. As an alternative, the article explores how the normative agenda in Eastern Europe serves instrumental purposes. Selective norm promotion has the potential to change the hierarchy of identities among post-Soviet states.
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2
ID:   130906


Role of Crimea in the integration choice of Ukraine / Mashchenko, Alexander   Journal Article
Mashchenko, Alexander Journal Article
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Publication 2014.
Summary/Abstract I SHARE the greater part of apprehensions voiced here in connection with a possible signing of the Association Agreement between Ukraine and the EU. This will be a heavy blow to Ukrainian and Crimean economies. I want to draw your attention to the fact that without Crimea the situation in Ukraine could have been worse or even much worse. It is Crimea and its people who kept Ukraine within the Russian World and prevented the final rupture. In a way, the transfer of the peninsula to Ukraine was in the interests of Russia. Having sacrificed Taurida, it retained Ukraine in the field of its political and cultural attraction. I do hope that sociologists, political scientists, political technologists, and politicians will agree that the majority of the Crimean population would have voted for a membership in the Customs Union at a referendum on Ukraine's civilizational (integration) choice had it been organized. Let us hypothesize how would the deputies of the Supreme Rada of Ukraine who represent Crimea in this highest legislative structure vote at a referendum or in the Rada.
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