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Geopolitics in Post-Wall Europe
Security, Territory and Identity
Edited by:
- Ola Tunander - International Peace Research Institute, Oslo, Norway
- Pavel K Baev - Peace Research Institute Oslo, Norway and Brookings Institution, USA
- Victoria Ingrid Einagel - University of Oslo, Norway
March 1997 | 272 pages | SAGE Publications Ltd
The fall of the Berlin Wall symbolized a dramatic turning-point in the history of European politics and security. Geopolitics in Post-Wall Europe highlights the new relations between politics, culture, and territory. It analyzes the major geopolitical shifts in the connection between security and identity.
Part I covers the general geopolitical tendencies in Europe, including conflicts between "culturism" and universalism, between national-romantic primordialism and cosmopolitan post-national identities, and between territory and escape from territory. Part II deals with potential tensions between Russia and Europe and the possible emergence of a new European "wall" between an extended NATO on the one hand and Russia and the CIS on the other. Part III focuses on the borderland between Europe, Russia, and the Muslim world, with particular emphasis on the former Yugoslavia as a site of conflict between the new "metaphorical empires."
While this book is written primarily for scholars and students of political science, international relations and political geography, it will also be of interest to diplomats and journalists.
Ola Tunander
Introduction
PART ONE: A NEW EUROPEAN ORDER: GENERAL TENDENCIES
Ola Tunander
Post-Cold War Europe
Pierre Hassner
Obstinate and Obsolete
Ole Waever
Imperial Metaphors
Uffe [sl]Ostergaard
Nation States and Empires in the Current Process of European Change
Shireen T Hunter
Europe's Relations with the Muslim World
PART TWO: RUSSIA AND THE WEST - FROM COLD WAR TO A `COLD PEACE'?
Iver B Neumann
The Geopolitics of Delineating `Russia' and `Europe'
Pavel K Baev
Russia's Departure from Empire
Yuriy Borko
Possible Scenarios for Geopolitical Shift in Russian-European Relations
PART THREE: THE BALKANS: BETWEEN EUROPE AND THE `OTHER'
Christopher Cviic
The New Balance of Power in South-Eastern Europe
Victoria Ingrid Einagel
Lasting Peace in Bosnia? Politics of Territory and Identity
Edward Mortimer
Concluding Remarks