ABSTRACT

After the collapse of the Soviet Union, there were high hopes of Russia’s "modernisation" and rapid political and economic integration with the EU. But now, given its own policies of national development, Russia appears to have ‘limits to integration’. Today, much European political discourse again evokes East/West civilisational divides and antagonistic geopolitical interests in EU-Russia relations. This book provides a carefully researched and timely analysis of this complex relationship and examines whether this turn in public debate corresponds to local-level experience – particularly in border areas where the European Union and Russian Federation meet.

This multidisciplinary book - covering geopolitics, international relations, political economy and human geography - argues that the concept ‘limits to integration’ has its roots in geopolitical reasoning; it examines how Russian regional actors have adapted to the challenges of simultaneous internal and external integration, and what kind of strategies they have developed in order to meet the pressures coming across the border and from the federal centre. It analyses the reconstitution of Northwest Russia as an economic, social and political space, and the role cross-border interaction has had in this process. The book illustrates how a comparative regional perspective offers insights into the EU-Russia relationship: even if geopolitics sets certain constraints to co-operation, and market processes have led to conflict in cross-border interaction, several actors have been able to take initiative and create space for increasing cross-border integration in the conditions of Russia’s internal reconstitution.

chapter |12 pages

On the edge of neighbourhood

Regional dimensions of the EU–Russia interface

part |104 pages

Processes and actors of cross-border interaction

chapter |13 pages

Geopolitics and the market

Borderland economies in the making

chapter |14 pages

Reconnecting territorialities?

Spatial planning co-operation between Finnish and Russian subnational governments

chapter |17 pages

Russia's oil and gas export infrastructure

New routes, new actors

part |62 pages

Northwest Russia

chapter |16 pages

Company towns on the border

The post-Soviet transformation of Svetogorsk and Kostomuksha

chapter |16 pages

Repositioning a border town

Sortavala

chapter |11 pages

Informal transitions

Northwest Russian youth between ‘Westernization' and Soviet legacies

chapter |17 pages

Karelia

A Finnish–Russian borderland on the edge of neighbourhood