ABSTRACT

The emergence of large regions within Russia as centres of gravity for political and international power, and the changing relationship between these emerging regions and the centre are critically important factors currently at work within Russia. This book examines the whole question of Russian regions and regionalism. It considers important themes related to regionalism, including demography, security, military themes and international relations, and looks at a wide range of particular regions as case studies. It discusses the extent to which regions have succeeded in establishing themselves as centres of power, and assesses the degree to which President Putin is succeeding in incorporating regions into a hierarchy of power in which the primacy of the centre is retained.

part 1|37 pages

Introduction

chapter 2|19 pages

Putin

An End to Centrifugalism?

part 2|99 pages

Thematic Aspects of Russian Regionalism

chapter 5|19 pages

‘Regionology' and Russian Foreign Policy

Identifying the Theoretical Alternatives

chapter 6|19 pages

Russia's Regionalisation

The Interplay of Domestic and International Factors

chapter 7|18 pages

Military Aspects of Regionalism

part 3|126 pages

Russia's Regions under Putin Case Studies

chapter 8|23 pages

Sakhalin Oblast

Sectoral Globalisation

chapter 9|21 pages

Centre–Periphery Conflict as a Security Dilemma

Moscow v. Vladivostok

chapter 10|19 pages

The ‘Power Vertical' and Horizontal Networking

Competing Strategies of Domestic and International Integration for Nizhniy Novgorod Oblast

chapter 11|20 pages

Regionalisation of Russian Foreign and Security Policy

The Case of St Petersburg

chapter 12|22 pages

Kaliningrad

A Pilot Region?

chapter 13|19 pages

Moscow

Centre and Periphery

part 4|13 pages

Conclusions