Description
The aims of this module are to give the student an understanding of the motives of Russian foreign policy, the forces that shape it, the instruments it uses and its impact on the world. The module begins by outlining the foreign policy of the USSR up to 1991 and then moves on to examine the foreign policy of the new Russian state as it has developed under Presidents Boris El’tsin, Vladimir Putin, Dmitrii Medvedev and Putin again. We shall consider the interrelationship between increasing domestic authoritarianism and international politics. We shall investigate how Russia, faced with NATO and EU enlargement and American unilateralism, sought to use its new wealth to re-assert itself as a great power, first of all in the former Soviet Union as illustrated by the August 2008 conflict in Georgia; whether the international economic crisis encouraged a re-appraisal; and why Putin has been willing to sacrifice good relations with Western countries in order to annex the Crimea and build the planned ‘Eurasian Union’. Additionally, the module aims to develop the presentational skills of the student, through the assimilation and analysis of the available literature (which is now quite substantial) and the requirements to offer seminar presentations and write essays; and to prepare the student for careers where knowledge of Russian foreign policy will be an asset. The module will draw on a number of disciplines, in particular Political Science, History and Economics.
Module deliveries for 2024/25 academic year
Last updated
This module description was last updated on 19th August 2024.
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