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In this book Richard Sakwa provides a new analysis of the end of the Cold War and the subsequent failure to create a comprehensive and inclusive peace order in Europe. The end of the Cold War did not create a sustainable peace system. Instead, for a quarter of a century a 'cold peace' reflected the tension between cooperative and competitive behaviour. None of the fundamental problems of European security were resolved, and tensions accumulated. In 2014 the crisis exploded in the form of conflict in Ukraine, provoking what some call a 'new Cold War'. Russia against the Rest challenges the view that this is a replay of the old conflict, explaining how the tensions between Russia and the Atlantic community reflect a global realignment of the international system. Sakwa provides a balanced and carefully researched analysis of the trajectory of European and global politics since the late 1980s.
. An original analysis of the end of the Cold War and the subsequent failure to create a symmetrical and inclusive peace order in Europe
. Develops an original model of the international system, encompassing the liberal international order and the emergence of an anti-hegemonic alignment of Russia, China and others, that will allow readers to apply the model to the biggest questions of our day in international politics
. Provides rich empirical and theoretical material to examine the dynamics of conflict and cooperation between Russia and the Atlantic institutions
Introduction
1. Cold War to cold peace
2. Order without hegemony
3. Russian grievances
4. Resistance and neo-revisionism
5. Europe, Eurasia and heartland conflicts
6. After the cold peace
7. Remilitarisation and the new apocalypse
8. America and global leadership
9. The EU, Europe and Russia
10. Towards a post-western world
11. The new globalism and the politics of resistance
Conclusion.
Description
In this book Richard Sakwa provides a new analysis of the end of the Cold War and the subsequent failure to create a comprehensive and inclusive peace order in Europe. The end of the Cold War did not create a sustainable peace system. Instead, for a quarter of a century a 'cold peace' reflected the tension between cooperative and competitive behaviour. None of the fundamental problems of European security were resolved, and tensions accumulated. In 2014 the crisis exploded in the form of conflict in Ukraine, provoking what some call a 'new Cold War'. Russia against the Rest challenges the view that this is a replay of the old conflict, explaining how the tensions between Russia and the Atlantic community reflect a global realignment of the international system. Sakwa provides a balanced and carefully researched analysis of the trajectory of European and global politics since the late 1980s.
. An original analysis of the end of the Cold War and the subsequent failure to create a symmetrical and inclusive peace order in Europe
. Develops an original model of the international system, encompassing the liberal international order and the emergence of an anti-hegemonic alignment of Russia, China and others, that will allow readers to apply the model to the biggest questions of our day in international politics
. Provides rich empirical and theoretical material to examine the dynamics of conflict and cooperation between Russia and the Atlantic institutions