ABSTRACT

Security Dynamics in the Former Soviet Bloc focuses on four former Soviet sub-regions (the Baltic Sea region, the Slavic republics, the Black Sea region, and Central Asia) to explore the degree to which 'democratic security', which includes de-politicisation of, and civilian oversight of, the military, resolution of conflicts by international cooperation, and involvement in international organisations. It examines how far states in these regions have developed cooperative foreign and security policies towards their immediate neighbours and key Western states and organisations, explores the interplay between internal and external aspects of democratic security building, and uses case-study examples to show how inter-state bi-lateral and multi-lateral relations are developing.

part |14 pages

Introduction

part |46 pages

Baltic security politics

part |69 pages

Interstate relations in the core CIS

chapter |17 pages

The ‘normalisation' of Russian foreign policy

The role of pragmatic nationalism and big business

chapter |14 pages

Border security implications for dual enlargement

A comparison of Russia and Ukraine

chapter |18 pages

Imperialism to realism

The role of the West in Russian foreign policy towards Ukraine

chapter |18 pages

The union of Belarus and Russia

The role of NATO and the EU

part |54 pages

Security politics in the CIS periphery

part |16 pages

Security Dynamics

chapter |14 pages

Conclusions

Security dynamics and the ‘post-Soviet bloc'