Skip to main content Accessibility help
×
Hostname: page-component-7bb8b95d7b-fmk2r Total loading time: 0 Render date: 2024-09-14T17:47:28.934Z Has data issue: false hasContentIssue false

Bibliography

Published online by Cambridge University Press:  30 March 2017

Richard Youngs
Affiliation:
University of Warwick
Get access

Summary

Image of the first page of this content. For PDF version, please use the ‘Save PDF’ preceeding this image.'
Type
Chapter
Information
Europe's Eastern Crisis
The Geopolitics of Asymmetry
, pp. 237 - 250
Publisher: Cambridge University Press
Print publication year: 2017

Access options

Get access to the full version of this content by using one of the access options below. (Log in options will check for institutional or personal access. Content may require purchase if you do not have access.)

References

Abbasov, F., The Europeanisation of the Southern Gas Corridor: Assessing the institutional dimension of the EU’s energy security, PhD Thesis, Sheffield University, 2016.Google Scholar
Abbasov, S., ‘Azerbaijan Divided Over Crimea’s Implications for Karabakh Peace’, EurasiaNet.org, 20 March 2014. Available at: www.eurasianet.org/node/68172.Google Scholar
Ademmer, E., ‘Interdependence and EU-demanded policy change in a shared neighbourhood’, Journal of European Public Policy, 22/5, 2015, 671–89.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Agnew, J., Geopolitics: Re-visioning World Politics, London: Routledge, 1998.Google Scholar
Al-Rodhan, N., Neo-statecraft and Meta-geopolitics, Berlin: LIT Verlag, 2009.Google Scholar
Alieva, L., ‘Azerbaijan and the ENP: When soft power and security are tightly related’, in Inayeh, A., Schwarzer, D. and Forbrig, J. (eds) Regional Repercussions of the Ukraine Crisis: Challenges for the Six Eastern Partnership Countries, Berlin: GMF Europe, 2014, p. 12.Google Scholar
Allison, R., ‘Russian “deniable” intervention in Ukraine: How and why Russia broke the rules’, International Affairs, 90/6, 2014, 1255–97.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Allison, R., ‘Security Policy, Geopolitics and International Order in EU-Russian Relations during the Ukraine Crisis’, in Nitoiu, C. (ed.) Avoiding a New ‘Cold War’: The Future of EU-Russia Relations in the Context of the Ukraine Crisis, London: LSE Ideas Report, 2016.Google Scholar
Arutunyan, A., ‘Putin’s new foreign policy rulebook’, Open Democracy, 3 November 2014.Google Scholar
Arutunyan, A., The Putin Mystique: Inside Russia’s Power Cult, Warks: Skyscraper, 2014.Google Scholar
Babayan, N., Democratic Transformation and Obstruction: The European Union, United States and Russia in the South Caucasus, London: Routledge: 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Behnke, A., ‘The politics of geopolitik in post Cold-War Germany’, Geopolitics, 3, 2006, 396419.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Bertelsmann Stiftung, , Free Trade from Lisbon to Vladivostok. A Tool for Peace and Prosperity: The Effects of a Free Trade Area between the EU and the Eurasian Region, Gütersloh, 2016.Google Scholar
Birchfield, V., ‘A normative power Europe framework of transnational policy formation’, Journal of European Public Policy, 20/6, 2013, 907–22.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Biscop, S., EU Foreign Policy between the Revolution and the Status Quo, Brussels: Egmont Institute, 2014.Google Scholar
Biscop, S., Game of Zones: The Quest for Influence in Europe’s Neighbourhood, Brussels: Egmont Institute, Egmont Paper 67, 2014.Google Scholar
Biscop, S., Geopolitics with European Characteristics: An Essay on Pragmatic Idealism, Equality, and Strategy, Brussels: Egmont Institute, 2016, p. 3.Google Scholar
Biscop, S. and Andersson, J. (eds) The EU and the European Security Strategy: Forging a global Europe, London: Routledge, 2008.Google Scholar
Bond, I., Europe and Russia: Continental Divide?, London: Centre for European Reform, 2014.Google Scholar
Bond, I., The EU and Russia: Uncommon Spaces, London: Centre for European Reform, 2014.Google Scholar
Boonstra, J. and Delcour, L., A Broken Region: Evaluating EU Polices in the South Caucasus, Madrid: Fride, 2015.Google Scholar
Börzel, T. and van Hüllen, V., ‘One voice, one message, but conflicting goals: Cohesiveness and consistency in the European Neighbourhood Policy’, Journal of European Public Policy, 21/7, 2015, 1033–49.Google Scholar
Bouchet, N., How to Counter Russia’s Anti-Democratic Strategy, 2015, Washington DC: German Marshall Fund.Google Scholar
Burke-White, W., ‘Crimea and the international legal order’, Survival, 56/4, 2014, 6580.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burlyuk, O., ‘A thorny path to the spotlight: The rule of law component in EU external policies and EU-Ukraine relations’, European Journal of Law Reform, 1, 2014.Google Scholar
Burlyuk, O., ‘An ambitious failure: Conceptualising the EU approach to rule of law promotion (in Ukraine)’, Hague Journal on the Rule of Law 6/1, 2014, 2646.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Burlyuk, O., The role of culture in reconciliation in the Ukraine crisis, More Europe policy paper. Available at: wwww.moreurope.org, 2014.Google Scholar
Buzan, B. and Lawson, G., The Global Transformation: History, Modernity and the Making of International Relations, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Caiser, T., ‘Why the EU-Russia Strategic Partnership could not prevent a confrontation over Ukraine: EU just as zero-sum now as Russia’, in Nitoiu, C. (ed.) Avoiding a New ‘Cold War’: The Future of EU-Russia Relations in the Context of the Ukraine Crisis, London: LSE Ideas Report, 2016.Google Scholar
Charap, S., ‘Ukraine: Seeking an elusive new normal’, Survival, 56/3, 2014, 8594.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Chirila, V., ‘Moldova: More focus, flexibility and visibility for the European Neighbourhood Policy’, in Inayeh, A. and Forbig, J. (eds), Reviewing the European Neighbourhood Policy: Eastern Perspectives, Berlin: GMF Europe, 2015.Google Scholar
Christiansen, T. and Tonra, B. (eds) Rethinking European Union Foreign Policy, Manchester: Manchester University Press, 2004.Google Scholar
Christou, G., ‘The European Union’s human security discourse: Where are we now?European Security, 23/3, 2014, 364–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ciurea, C., Moldova after the Elections: Politics Overtakes Reforms, London: European Council for Foreign Relations, 2015.Google Scholar
Cladi, L. and Locatelli, A., ‘Worth a shot: On the explanatory power of bandwagoning in transatlantic relations’, Contemporary Security Policy, 34/2, 2013, 374–81.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Conceição-Heldt, E. and Meunier, S., ‘Speaking with a single voice: Internal cohesiveness and external effectiveness of the EU in global governance’, Journal of European Public Policy, 21/7, 2014, 961–79.Google Scholar
Cornell, S., ‘European Union: Eastern Partnership vs Eurasian Union’, in Starr, S. and Cornell (eds), S., Putin’s Grand Strategy: The Eurasian Union and Its Discontents, Washington DC: Central Asia-Caucasus Institute, Johns Hopkins University and Stockholm: Silk Road Studies Program 2014.Google Scholar
Cornell, S., Getting Georgia Right, Brussels: Centre for European Studies, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Costa, O., ‘A force for and because of multilateralism: When is the EU a multilateralist actor in world society?’, Journal of European Public Policy, 20/8, 2013, 1213–28.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ćwiek-Karpowicz, J. and Secrieru, S. (eds) Russia and Sanctions, Warsaw: PISM, 2015.Google Scholar
Czech Association for International Affairs, Conference Report: The International Conference ‘Eastern Partnership Five Years On: Time For a New Strategy?’, Prague, 2014.Google Scholar
Damro, C., ‘Market power Europe’, Journal of European Public Policy 19/5, 2012, 682–99.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Damro, C., ‘Market power Europe: Exploring a dynamic conceptual framework’, Journal of European Public Policy, 22/9, 2015, 1336–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
De Jong, D., ‘Why Europe should fight Nord Stream II’, EU Observer, 23 February 2016.Google Scholar
De Vries, A., Portela, C. and Guijarro-Usobiaga, B., Improving the Effectiveness of Sanctions: A Checklist for the EU, Brussels: Centre for European Policy Studies, 2014.Google Scholar
Del Sarto, R., ‘Normative empire Europe: The European Union, its borderlands, and the “Arab Spring”’, Journal of Common Market Studies, 54/2, 2016, 215–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delcour, L., The EU and Russia in their ‘Contested Neighbourhood’: Multiple External Influences, Policy Transfer and Domestic Change, London: Routledge, 2017.Google Scholar
Delcour, L. and Kostanyan, H., Towards a Fragmented Neighbourhood: Policies of the EU and Russia and their Consequences for the Area that Lies in Between Brussels, CEPS Policy Brief 17, 2014.Google Scholar
Delcour, L. and Tulmets, E. (eds) Pioneer Europe? Testing EU Foreign Policy in the Neighbourhood, Baden-Baden: Nomos, 2008.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delcour, L. and Wolczuk, K., ‘Spoiler or facilitator of democratization?: Russia’s role in Georgia and Ukraine’, Democratization, 22/s, 2015, 459–78.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Delcour, L., Kostanyan, H., Vandecasteele, B. and Van Elsuwege, P., ‘The Implications of Eurasian Integration for the EU’s Relations with the Countries in the post-Soviet Space’, Studia Diplomatica, LXVIII-1, 2015, 533.Google Scholar
Dias, V., ‘The EU’s post-liberal approach to peace: Framing EUBAM’s contribution to the Moldova–Transnistria conflict transformation’, European Security, 22/3, 2013, 338–54.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Dreyer, I., ‘EU not yet ready to talk to Eurasian Economic Union as WTO cases mount’, Bordelex, 7 December 2014.Google Scholar
Dreyer, I., ‘EU Ukraine DCFTA versus Russia-sponsored Eurasian economic union: Flexibility on implementation in sight’, Borderlex, 28 August 2014.Google Scholar
Dufour, N., ‘France’s D-Day diplomacy: Time for Paris to end its hedging on Russia’, PISM Bulletin no. 84, Warsaw: Polish Institute for International Affairs, 2014.Google Scholar
Emerson, M., Russia’s Economic Interests and the EU’s DCFTA with Ukraine, Brussels: Centre for European Policy Studies, 2014.Google Scholar
Erixson, F., How Trade and Security became Europe’s Unhappy Couple, Brussels: Carnegie Europe, March 2015.Google Scholar
EU Committee of Regions, CORLEAP: Looking Forward to Democratic Reform in the Eastern Partnership Countries, Brussels, 2014.Google Scholar
Eurasia Partnership Foundation, Alternative Assessment Report, Implementation of the ENP Action Plan and EaP bilateral and Multilateral Roadmaps of 2013, Tbilsi, 2014.Google Scholar
European Commission, ENP Country Progress Report 2014 – Ukraine, March 2015.Google Scholar
European Commission, EU-Ukraine Association Agenda, Brussels, 2009.Google Scholar
European Commission and High Representative, Review of the European Neighbourhood Policy, JOIN (2015) 50 final, November 2015.Google Scholar
European Commission and High Representative for Foreign Affairs and Security Policy, Joint Consultation Paper: Towards a New Neighbourhood Policy, JOIN (2015) 6 March 2015.Google Scholar
European Commission and High Representative for Foreign and Security Policy, Neighbourhood at the Crossroads: Implementation of the European Neighbourhood Policy in 2013, JOIN(2014) 12.Google Scholar
European Council for Foreign Relations, Annual Meeting Memorandum, 12–13 June 2014.Google Scholar
European Union, Foreign Policy Scorecard 2014, London: ECFR, 2014.Google Scholar
European Union, European Security Strategy: A Strong Europe in a Safer World, 2003.Google Scholar
European Union, Ukraine ENP Progress Report, Brussels, 2013.Google Scholar
European Union, A Framework Strategy for a Resilient Energy Union with a Forward-looking Climate Change Policy, COM (2015), 80 final.Google Scholar
Eyal, J., Russia’s Ukraine Strategy Ends Europe’s Dream, London: Royal United Services Institute, 2014.Google Scholar
Far, S. and Youngs, R., Energy Union and EU Global Strategy, Stockholm: Swedish Institute for European Policy Studies, 2015.Google Scholar
Fischer, S., Escalation in Ukraine, Berlin: SWP, SWP Comments, 2014.Google Scholar
Formuszewicz, R., Germany’s Policy Towards Russia: Old Wine in New Wineskins, Warsaw: Polish Institute for International Affairs, 2014, p. 4.Google Scholar
Forsberg, T., ‘Normative power Europe, once again: A conceptual analysis of an ideal type’, Journal of Common Market Studies, 49/6, 2011, 1183–204.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forsberg, T., ‘From Ostpolitk to frostpolitik? Merkel, Putin and German foreign policy towards Russia’, International Affairs 92/1, 2016, 2142.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Forsberg, T. and Haukkala, H., ‘Could it have been different? The evolution of the EU-Russian conflict and its alternatives’, in Nitoiu, C. (ed.) Avoiding a new ‘Cold War’: The Future of EU-Russia Relations in the Context of the Ukraine Crisis, London: LSE Ideas Report, 2016, p. 12.Google Scholar
Freedman, L., ‘Ukraine and the art of exhaustion’, Survival, 57/5, 2015, 77106.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Füle, S., ‘New Europe and enlargement in a new political context’, reprinted by European Commission, SPEECH/14/323, 11 April 2014.Google Scholar
Garton Ash, T., ‘Angela Merkel has faced down the Russian bear in the battle for Europe’, The Guardian, 22 December 2014.Google Scholar
Gast, A-S., A Shift In The EU Strategy for Central Asia, Moscow: Carnegie Moscow Centre, 2014.Google Scholar
German Marshall Fund, Transatlantic Trends 2014, Washington DC: German Marshall Fund, 2014.Google Scholar
German, T., ‘Heading west? Georgia’s Euro-Atlantic path’, International Affairs, 91/3, 2015, 601–14.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Getmanchuk, A., Ukraine-NATO: A Hidden Integration or Undeclared Neutrality?, Kiev: Institute for World Policy, June 2015.Google Scholar
Getmanchuk, A. and Solodkyy, S., Ukraine-Germany: How to Turn Situational Partnership into Priority One, Kiev: Institute for World Policy, 2016.Google Scholar
Gessel, G., Keeping up Appearances: How Europe is Supporting Ukraine’s Transformation, London: European Council on Foreign Relations, 2016.Google Scholar
Giles, K., Hanson, P., Lyne, R., Nixey, J., Sherr, J. and Woord, A., The Russian Challenge, London: Chatham House, 2015.Google Scholar
Gowan, R., ‘Lacking security strategy, EU counts on nearby crises to absorb threats’, World Politics Review, 28 July 2014.Google Scholar
Gros, D., ‘Restarting Ukraine’s economy’, Project Syndicate, 3 April 2014.Google Scholar
Haass, R., ‘The unraveling: How to respond to a disordered world’, Foreign Affairs, November/December 2014.Google Scholar
Hagemann, C., ‘External Governance on the Terms of the Partner? The EU, Russia and the Republic of Moldova in the European Neighbourhood Policy’, Journal of European Integration, 35/7, 2013, 76783.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haukkala, H., ‘From cooperative to contested Europe? The conflict in Ukraine as a culmination of a long-term crisis in EU–Russia Relations’, Journal of Contemporary European Studies, 23/1, 2015, 2540.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Haverluk, T., Beauchemin, K. and Mueller, A., ‘The three critical flaws of critical geopolitics: Towards a neo-classical geopolitics’, Geopolitics, 19/1, 2004, 1939.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hebel, K. and Lenz, T., ‘The identity/policy nexus in European foreign policy’, Journal of European Public Policy, 23/4, 2016, 473491.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Heisbourg, F., ‘Preserving post-Cold War Europe’, Survival, 57/1, 2015, 3148.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Hellmann, G., ‘Germany’s world: Power and followership in a crisis-ridden Europe’, Global Affairs, 2/1, 2016, 320.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Her Majesty’s Government, National Security Strategy and Strategic Defence and Security Review 2015: A Secure and Prosperous United Kingdom, London: Stationery Office, 2015.Google Scholar
Hill, C. and Smith, M. (eds) International Relations and the European Union, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2nd edn, 2012.Google Scholar
House of Lords European Committee, The EU and Russia: Before and Beyond the Crisis in Ukraine, London: EU External Affairs Select Committee, 2015.Google Scholar
Huntingdon, S., The Clash of Civilizations and the Remaking of World Order, New York: Simon and Schuster, 1991.Google Scholar
Ikenberry, J., ‘The illusion of geopolitics’, Foreign Affairs, May–June 2014.Google Scholar
Inayeh, A., Schwarzer, D. and Forbrig, J. (eds) Regional Repercussions of the Ukraine Crisis: Challenges for the Six Eastern Partnership Countries, Berlin: GMF Europe, 2014.Google Scholar
Institute for World Policy, How the World Helps Ukraine, Kiev: Institute for World Policy, September 2014.Google Scholar
Ishkanian, A., ‘Engineered Civil Society: The Impact of 20 Years of Democracy Promotion on Civil Society Development in Former Soviet Countries’, in Beichelt, T., Hahn-Fuhr, I., Schimmelfennig, F. and Worschech, S. (eds), Civil Society and Democracy Promotion, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2014.Google Scholar
Jakobik, W., ‘A return to business as usual’, New Eastern Europe, 29 October 2015.Google Scholar
Kaca, E., A New Pact for Ukraine: Making EU Aid Work, Warsaw: Polish Institute for International Affairs, 2014.Google Scholar
Kaim, M., Maull, H. and Westphal, K., The Pan-European Order at the Crossroads: Three Principles for a New Beginning, Berlin: SWP, 2015.Google Scholar
Kearns, G., ‘Beyond the legacy of Makinder’, Geopolitics, 18/4, 2013, 917–32.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kempin, R. and Overhaus, M., ‘EU foreign policy in times of the financial and debt crisis’, European Foreign Affairs Review, 19/2, 2014, 179–94.Google Scholar
Keukalaire, S., ‘The European Union as a Diplomatic Actor: Internal, Traditional and Structural Diplomacy’, in Rees, W. and Smith, M. (eds) The International Relations of the European Union, London: Sage, 2008.Google Scholar
Keukeleire, S. and Bruyninckx, H., ‘The European Union, the BRICs and the Emerging New World Order’, in Hill, C. and Smith, M. (eds) International Relations and the European Union, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2nd edn, 2012.Google Scholar
Keukelaire, S. and Delreux, T., The Foreign Policy of the European Union, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2nd edn, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kissinger, H., World Order, London: Penguin, 2014.Google Scholar
Knaus, G., ‘Europe and Azerbaijan: The end of shame’, Journal of Democracy, 26/3, 2015, 518.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korfman, M., How to start a proxy war with Russia’, National Interest, 5 February 2015.Google Scholar
Korosteleva, E., The European Union and Its Eastern Neighbours: Towards a More Ambitious Partnership?, London: Routledge, 2012.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Korosteleva, E., ‘Evaluating the role of partnership in the European Neighbourhood Policy: The Eastern neighbourhood’, Eastern Journal of European Studies, 4/2, 2013, 1136.Google Scholar
Korosteleva, E., ‘The European Union, Russia and the Eastern region: The analytics of government for sustainable cohabitation’, Cooperation and Conflict, 51/3, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kostanyan, H., The Rocky Road to an EU-Armenia Agreement: From U-turn to Detour, Brussels: Centre for European Policy Studies, 2015.Google Scholar
Kostanyan, H., ‘Examining the discretion of the EEAS: What power to act in the EU-Moldova Association Agreement?’, European Foreign Affairs Review, 19/3, 2014, 37392.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kostanyan, H. and Vandecasteele, B., ‘The socialization potential of the Eastern Partnership Civil Society Forum’, Eastern Journal of European Studies, 4/2, 2013, 95110.Google Scholar
Krastev, I., Democracy Disrupted, Philadelphia: University of Pennsylvania Press, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Krastev, I., ‘Putin’s world’, Project Syndicate, 2 April 2014.Google Scholar
Krastev, I. and Leonard, M., The New European Order, London: European Council on Foreign Relations, 2014.Google Scholar
Kryvoi, Y. with Wilson, A., From Sanctions to Summits: Belarus after the Ukraine Crisis, London: European Council for Foreign Relations, 2015.Google Scholar
Kudelia, S., ‘EU-Ukraine Association Agreement: Yanukovych’s Two-Level Games’, PONARS Eurasia Network, 20 September 2013.Google Scholar
Kulesa, L. (ed.) Is a New Cold War Inevitable? Central European Views on Rebuilding Trust in the Euro-Atlantic Region, Warsaw: PISM, 2014.Google Scholar
Kundnani, H., Containment and Economic Interdependence, London: European Council for Foreign Relations, 2014.Google Scholar
Kundnani, H., ‘Leaving the West behind’, Foreign Affairs, December 2014.Google Scholar
Kupchan, C., ‘Centrifugal Europe’, Survival, 54/1, 2012, 111–18.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Kurkov, A., Ukraine Diaries, Dispatches from Kiev, London: Harvill Secker, 2014.Google Scholar
Langbein, J., ‘European Union governance towards the Eastern Neighbour-hood: transcending or redrawing Europe’s East–West divide?’, Journal of Common Market Studies, 52/1, 2014, 157–74.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Laurinavcius, M., Kascijnas, L. and Kajola, L., ‘What will determine Ukraine’s future scenariois?’, Eastern Pulse Newsletter 3/58, Eastern European Studies Centre, Vilnius, 2014.Google Scholar
Lavenex, S., ‘The power of functionalist extension: How EU rules travel’, Journal of European Public Policy 21/6, 2014, 885903.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavenex, S. and Schimmelfennig, F., ‘EU democracy promotion in the neighbourhood: From leverage to governance?’, Democratization 18/4, 2011, 885909.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavenex, S. and Schimmelfennig, F., ‘EU rules beyond EU borders: Theorizing external governance in European politics’, Journal of European Public Policy, 16/6, 2011, 791812.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lavrov, S., ‘Russia’s foreign policy: Historical background’, Russia in Global Affairs, 2016, English version available at: www.mid.ru/en/foreign_policy/news/-/asset_publisher/cKNonkJE02Bw/content/id/2124391.Google Scholar
Lehne, S., Reviving the OSCE: European Security and the Ukraine Crisis, Brussels: Carnegie Europe, 2015.Google Scholar
Lehne, S., Time to Reset the European Neighbourhood Policy, Brussels: Carnegie Europe, 2015.Google Scholar
Leonard, M., ‘Why Crimea matters’, Reuters, 10 April 2014.Google Scholar
Liik, K., The Real Problem with Mogherini’s Russia Paper, London: European Council for Foreign Relations, 20 January 2015.Google Scholar
Linkevčius, L., ‘Security Before Politics in Eastern Ukraine’, Wall Street Journal, 27 January 2016.Google Scholar
Litra, L. and Chkhikvadze, I., EU Membership Perspective for Georgia, Moldova and Ukraine: Impossible, Forgotten or Hidden?, Kiev: Institute for World Policy, 2016.Google Scholar
Lo, B., Russia and the New World Disorder, London: Chatham House, 2015.Google Scholar
Lucarelli, S. and Manners, I. (eds) Values and Principles in European Union Foreign Policy, London: Routledge, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Lyubashenko, I., ‘Democracy in a time of war’, New Eastern Europe, 26 October 2014.Google Scholar
Maçães, B., ‘We are all Eurasian now’, Financial Times, 25 November 2015.Google Scholar
MacFarlane, N. and Menon, A., ‘The EU and Ukraine’, Survival, 56/3, 2014, 95101.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Mackinder, H. J., ‘The geographical pivot of history’, Geographical Society, 23/4, 1904, 421–37.Google Scholar
Macmillan, M., The War That Ended Peace, London: Profile Books, 2013.Google Scholar
Major, C. and Puglierin, J., ‘Europe’s new (in)security order’, IPG Journal, 25 November 2014. Available at: www.ipg-journal.de.Google Scholar
Makarychev, A. and Devyatkov, A., The EU in Eastern Europe: Has Normative Power become Geopolitical?, Eurasia Policy Memo 310, George Washington University, February 2014.Google Scholar
Manners, I., ‘The normative ethics of the European Union’, International Affairs, 84/1, 2008, 4560.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Marrone, A., De France, O. and Fattibene, D. (eds) Defence Budgets and Cooperation in Europe: Developments, Trends and Drivers, IAI, IRIS, SWP, RUSI, 2016.Google Scholar
Matuszak, S., The Oligarchic Democracy: The Influence of Business Groups on Ukrainian Politics, Warsaw: Centre for Eastern Studies, 2012.Google Scholar
McCormick, J., The European Superpower, Basingstoke: Macmillan, 2007.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
McFaul, M., ‘Confronting Putin’s Russia’, New York Times, 23 March 2014.Google Scholar
McFaul, M. and Youngs, R., ‘Ukraine: External Actors and the Orange Revolution’, in McFaul, M. and Stoner (eds), K., Transitions to Democracy: A Comparative Perspective, Baltimore: Johns Hopkins Press, 2013.Google Scholar
Mearsheimer, J., ‘Why the Ukraine crisis is the West’s fault’, Foreign Affairs, September/October 2014.Google Scholar
Meister, S., Putin’s Plan, London: European Council for Foreign Relations, 2014.Google Scholar
Melo, F., ‘Perspectives on the European neighbourhood policy failure’, Journal of European Integration, 36/2, 2014, 189–93.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Menkiszak, M., The Putin Doctrine: The Formation of a Conceptual Framework for Russian Dominance in the Post-Soviet Area, Warsaw: Centre for Eastern Studies (OSW), 2014.Google Scholar
Menon, A., ‘Divided and declining? Europe in a changing world’, Journal of Common Market Studies, 52, Annual Review, 2014, 524.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Minakov, M., ‘Corrupting civil society in post-Maidan Ukraine’, Carnegie Russia Eurasia Outlook, 11 April 2015.Google Scholar
Mirimanova, N., Peace-building in Ukraine: What Role for the EU?, Brussels: European Peace-Building Liaison Office, 2014.Google Scholar
Monaghan, A., ‘Putin’s Russia: Shaping a ‘grand strategy’?’, International Affairs, 89/5, 2013, 1221–36.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Moshes, A., The War and Reforms in Ukraine, Can It Cope with Both? Helsinki: Finnish Institute for International Affairs, 2015.Google Scholar
Motyl, A., ‘Out of Kiev’s hands’, Foreign Policy, 4 May 2015.Google Scholar
NATO, Sanctions after Crimea: Have They Worked?, Brussels: NATO, 2015.Google Scholar
Natorski, M., ‘A new social contract for Ukraine’, New Eastern Europe, 26 March 2014.Google Scholar
Nielsen, K. and Vilson, M.The Eastern partnership: Soft power strategy or policy failure?’, European Foreign Affairs Review, 19/2, 2014, 243–62.Google Scholar
Nitoiu, C., ‘The Ukraine crisis is forcing the EU to abandon normative power and act more strategically in its eastern neighbourhood’, EUROPP LSE Blog, 21 September 2015.Google Scholar
Popescu, N., (ed.) Avoiding a New ‘Cold War’: The Future of EU-Russia Relations in the Context of the Ukraine Crisis, London: LSE Ideas Report, 2016.Google Scholar
Nixey, J., Russia and the EU Are Signing Their Divorce Papers, London: Chatham House, 2014.Google Scholar
Nodia, G., ‘The revenge of geopolitics’, Journal of Democracy, 25/4, 2014, 139–50.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
O’Tuathail, G., Critical Geopolitics, Minneapolis: University of Minnesota Press, 1996.Google Scholar
O’Tuathail, G., Dalby, S. and Routledge, P. (eds) The Geopolitics Reader, London: Routledge, 2003.Google Scholar
Organization for Security and Cooperation in Europe (OSCE), Back to diplomacy, Final Report and Recommendations of the Panel of Eminent Persons on European Security as a Common Project, 2015.Google Scholar
Paanukoski, E., ‘End of era of cognitive dissonance should do Ukraine good’, EU Neighborhood Guest Blog, August 29, 2013. Available at: http://euneighbourhoodguestblog.wordpress.com/tag/association-agreement.Google Scholar
Parkinson, J., ‘Uneasy Georgia waits for Russia reaction to Ukraine’, Wall Street Journal, 25 February 2014.Google Scholar
Petrova, T., From Solidarity to Geopolitics: Support for Democracy among Postcommunist States, Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Pew Research Centre, Global Attitudes Survey, Spring 2015, p. 52.Google Scholar
Pieniazek, P.Last chance for European values’, New Eastern Europe, 22 March 2014.Google Scholar
Pogodda, S., Richmond, O., Tocci, N., MacGinty, R. and Vogel, B., ‘Assessing the impact of EU governmentality in post-conflict countries: Pacification or reconciliation?’, European Security, 23/3, 2014, 227–49.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Polish Institute of International Affairs, Learning from Past Experience: Ways to Improve EU Aid on Reforms in the Eastern Partnership, Warsaw: PISM, 2014.Google Scholar
Popescu, N., ‘After Crimea: Putin’s Balance Sheet’, ISS Alert, Paris: EU Institute for Security Studies, April 2014.Google Scholar
Popescu, N., ‘First Lessons from the Ukrainian Crisis’, ISS Issue Alert, Paris: EU Institute for Security Studies, October 2014.Google Scholar
Portnov, A., ‘How ‘eastern Ukraine’ was lost’, Open Democracy, 14 January 2016.Google Scholar
Raik, K., ‘The EU and mass protests in the neighbourhood: Models of normative (in)action’, European Foreign Affairs Review, 17/4, 2012, 553–76.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Raik, K., ‘Liberalism and geopolitics in EU–Russia relations: Rereading the Baltic factor’, European Security, 25/2, 2016, 237–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rand Corporation, Security Sector Reform, October 2016.Google Scholar
Rettman, A., ‘The year history returned to Europe’, EU Observer, 22 December 2014.Google Scholar
Rettman, A., ‘Four fallacies of EU foreign policy’, EU Observer, 13 March 2015.Google Scholar
Rinke, A., ‘How Putin lost Berlin’, IPG Journal, 29 September 2014. Available at: www.ipg-journal.de.Google Scholar
Rodt, A., Whitman, R. and Wolff, S., ‘The EU as an international security provider: The need for a mid-range theory’, Global Society, 29/2, 2015, 149–55.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Rogers, J., A New Geography of European Power? Brussels: Egmont Institute, Egmont Paper 42, 2011.Google Scholar
Russell, Mead W., ‘The return of geopolitics’, Foreign Affairs, May/June 2014.Google Scholar
Rynning, S., ‘The false promise of continental concert: Russia, the West and the necessary balance of power’, International Affairs, 91/3, 2015, 539–52.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Ryzhkov, V., ‘The new Putin doctrine’, Moscow Times, 3 April 2014.Google Scholar
Sakwa, R., Frontline Ukraine: Crisis in the Borderlands, London: I. B. Tauris, 2015.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Samadashvili, S., Building a Lifeline for Freedom: Eastern Partnership 2.0, Brussels: Wilfired Martens Centre for European Studies, 2014.Google Scholar
Sasse, G., ‘Linkages and the promotion of democracy: The EU’s eastern neighbourhood’, Democratization, 20/4, 2013, 553–91.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Sasse, G., Constitution Making in Ukraine: Refocusing the Debate, Brussels: Carnegie Europe, April 2016.Google Scholar
Schimmelfennig, F., ‘How substantial is substance? Concluding reflections on the study of substance in EU democracy promotion’, European Foreign Affairs Review, 16/4, 2011, 727–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schimmelfennig, F., ‘Liberal intergovernmentalism and the euro area crisis’, Journal of European Public Policy, 22/2, 2015, 177–95.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Schumacher, T., ‘Letter from Tbilisi’, Open Democracy, 2 December 2014.Google Scholar
Schumacher, T., Armenia, Azerbaijan and the Nagorno-Karabakh Conflict: Why the ‘Black Garden’ Will Not Blossom Any Time Soon, Brussels: Egmont Institute, 2016.Google Scholar
Secrieirn, S., Can Moldova Stay on the Road to Europe?, London: European Council for Foreign Relations, 2014.Google Scholar
Shapovalova, N. and Youngs, R., Civil Society Support in the Eastern Neighbourhood, Madrid: Fride, 2013.Google Scholar
Sherr, J., ‘Putin is not master of the new world order’, Prospect, 14 March 2014.Google Scholar
Shevtsova, L., ‘Don’t be fooled, the Kremlin isn’t back pedalling’, The American Interest, 8 May 2014.Google Scholar
Simon, L., ‘The spider in Europe’s web? French grand strategy from Iraq to Libya’, Geopolitics, 18/2, 2013, 403–34.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Simon, L., ‘Post-European world’, European Geostrategy, 7 June 2015.Google Scholar
Smith, K., European Union Foreign Policy in a Changing World, 2nd edn, Cambridge: Polity, 2008.Google Scholar
Smith, M., ‘Beyond the comfort zone: Internal crisis and challenges in the EU’s response to rising powers’, International Affairs, 89/3, 2013, 653–71.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Smith, M.E., ‘Toward a theory of EU foreign policy making: Multi-level governance, domestic politics, and national adaptation to Europe’s common foreign and security policy’, Journal of European Public Policy 11, 2004, 740–45.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Snyder, T., ‘The battle in Ukraine means everything’, New Republic, 11 May 2014.Google Scholar
Soros, G., ‘Wake-up Europe!’, New York Review of Books, October 2014.Google Scholar
Soros, G., ‘Ukraine and Europe: What should be done?’, New York Review of Books, October 2015.Google Scholar
Speck, U., The West’s Response to the Ukraine Conflict: A Transatlantic Success Story, Washington DC: Transatlantic Academy, 2016.Google Scholar
Sperling, J. and Webber, M., ‘Security governance in Europe: A return to system’, European Security, 23/2, 2014, 126–44.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Stockholm International Peace Research Institute, SIPRI Yearbook 2015: Armaments, Disarmaments and International Security, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2015.Google Scholar
Stokes, D. and Whitman, R., ‘Transatlantic triage? European and UK ‘grand strategy’ after the US rebalance to Asia’, International Affairs, 89/5, 2013, 10871107.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Strachan, H., ‘Europe, Geopolitics and Strategy’, Egmont lecture, 9 January 2015.Google Scholar
Stubb, A., ‘European Policy towards Russia’, speech delivered in Berlin, 29 September 2014. Available at: http://vnk.fi/ajankohtaista/puheet/puhe/en.jsp?oid=426086.Google Scholar
Techau, J., ‘Ukraine: Birthplace of strategic Europe’, Carnegie Strategic Europe blog, 18 March 2014.Google Scholar
Tèlo, M., Europe: A Civilian Power? European Union, Global Governance, World Order, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2007.Google Scholar
Thomas, D. (ed.) Making EU Foreign Policy, Basingstoke: Macmillan, 2011.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Tocci, N., The Neighbourhood Policy Is Dead. What Next for European Foreign Policy along its Arc of Instability, Rome: IAI, 2014.Google Scholar
Tolstoy, A. and McCaffray, E., ‘Mind games: Alexander Dugin and Russia’s war of ideas’, World Affairs, March/April 2015.Google Scholar
Trenin, D., ‘Russia’s great power problem’, National Interest, 28 October 2014.Google Scholar
Trenin, D., The Ukraine Crisis and the Resumption of Great Power Rivalry, Washington DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2014.Google Scholar
Tudoroiu, T., ‘The European Union, Russia, and the future of the Transnistrian frozen conflict’, East European Politics and Societies, 26/1, 2012.Google Scholar
Waever, O., ‘Politics, security, theory’, Security Dialogue, 42/4, 2011, 465–80.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Walt, S., ‘NATO owes Putin a big thank you’, Foreign Policy, 4 September 2014.Google Scholar
Wedgwood, Benn D., ‘On re-examining Western attitudes towards Russia’, International Affairs, 90/6, 2014, 1319–28.Google Scholar
Wesslau, F., ‘EU needs to step up its game in Ukraine’, EU Observer, 31 August 2015.Google Scholar
Whitman, R. and Wolff, S. (eds) The European Neighbourhood Policy in Perspective, Basingstoke: Palgrave Macmillan, 2010.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wigell, M. and Vihma, A., ‘Geopolitics versus geoeconomics: The case of Russia’s geostrategy and its effects on the EU’, International Affairs, 92/3, 2016.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wilson, A., Ukraine Crisis: What It Means for the West, New Haven, CT: Yale University Press, 2014.Google Scholar
Wilson, A. and Andreyev, O., Ukraine: A Failing State, or Survival of the Old State?, London: European Council for Foreign Relations, May 2013.Google Scholar
Wissel, J., ‘The structure of the ‘EU’ropean ensemble of state apparatuses and its geopolitical ambitions’, Geopolitics, 19/3, 2014, 490513.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Wolczuk, K., Ukraine and the EU: Turning the Association Agreement into a Success Story, Brussels: European Policy Centre, 2014.Google Scholar
Young, A., ‘The European Union as a global regulator? Context and comparison’, Journal of European Public Policy, 22/9, 2015, 1233–52 – and others in this special edition.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Youngs, R., Europe’s Role in Global Politics: A Retreat from Liberal Internationalism, London: Routledge, 2009.Google Scholar
Youngs, R., Europe in the New Middle East: Opportunity or Exclusion?, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Youngs, R., The Uncertain Legacy of Crisis: European Foreign Policy Faces the Future, Washington DC: Carnegie Endowment for International Peace, 2014.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zarembo, K., EUAM’s First Year: Ambitions versus Reality, Kiev: Institute for World Policy, 2015.Google Scholar
Zasztowt, K., ‘The radicalisation of separatists in Crimea’, PISM Bulletin, 21, 17 February 2014.Google Scholar
Zielonka, J., Europe as Empire, Oxford: Oxford University Press, 2006.CrossRefGoogle Scholar
Zielonka, J., ‘The EU as an international actor: Unique or ordinary?’, European Foreign Affairs Review, 16, 2011, 281301.CrossRefGoogle Scholar

Save book to Kindle

To save this book to your Kindle, first ensure coreplatform@cambridge.org is added to your Approved Personal Document E-mail List under your Personal Document Settings on the Manage Your Content and Devices page of your Amazon account. Then enter the ‘name’ part of your Kindle email address below. Find out more about saving to your Kindle.

Note you can select to save to either the @free.kindle.com or @kindle.com variations. ‘@free.kindle.com’ emails are free but can only be saved to your device when it is connected to wi-fi. ‘@kindle.com’ emails can be delivered even when you are not connected to wi-fi, but note that service fees apply.

Find out more about the Kindle Personal Document Service.

  • Bibliography
  • Richard Youngs, University of Warwick
  • Book: Europe's Eastern Crisis
  • Online publication: 30 March 2017
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316344033.013
Available formats
×

Save book to Dropbox

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Dropbox.

  • Bibliography
  • Richard Youngs, University of Warwick
  • Book: Europe's Eastern Crisis
  • Online publication: 30 March 2017
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316344033.013
Available formats
×

Save book to Google Drive

To save content items to your account, please confirm that you agree to abide by our usage policies. If this is the first time you use this feature, you will be asked to authorise Cambridge Core to connect with your account. Find out more about saving content to Google Drive.

  • Bibliography
  • Richard Youngs, University of Warwick
  • Book: Europe's Eastern Crisis
  • Online publication: 30 March 2017
  • Chapter DOI: https://doi.org/10.1017/9781316344033.013
Available formats
×