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Srl | Item |
1 |
ID:
124806
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Publication |
2013.
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Summary/Abstract |
BY THE SECOND DECADE of the 21st century, the academic community in Russia and abroad has not yet reached a consensus on economic diplomacy. There is no more or less concerted approach to the terms and ideas used by economic diplomacy; there is no agreement on the time when economic diplomacy first appeared and on its evolution; there is no agreement on its types and mechanisms. Those who write on diplomatic diplomacy are few and far between: I. Ornatsky and L. Gradobitova, also N. Shchetinin who founded the post-Soviet theory of economic diplomacy, Academician I. Ivanov, T. Zonova, A. Likhachev, M. Konarovsky, D. Degtyarev, and some others. Guy Carron de la Carrière, A. Plashchinsky, N. Bayne, S. Woolcock, A. Kasymov, and B. Giyasov are working on the theory of economic diplomacy abroad. This article is my own attempt at developing the theory still further.
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2 |
ID:
181351
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Summary/Abstract |
AT THE turn of the 21st century, Russian-American relations were characterized by a flurry of activity from political elites and diplomats. For example, in the course of a single year, from September 1999 to September 2000, Vladimir Putin, as prime minister and then as president of Russia, and US President Bill Clinton participated in multiple high-level meetings together, including an APEC summit, a G8 summit, and the Millennium Summit put on by the United Nations in New York.
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