THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EU AND RUSSIA: SYMBIOSIS OR COMPETITION?
Cooperation and trust between Russia and the European Union (EU), two of the most important international actors, have reached the lowest level since the Cold War. The main bone of contention has been the future of countries situated in Eastern Europe, in the so-called ‘in-between’/’buffer’ region....
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Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi
2014-08-01
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doaj-3b13889b386f49bfb914ac0b234d06842020-11-24T20:53:11ZengAlexandru Ioan Cuza University of IasiCES Working Papers2067-76932014-08-0162A4055THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EU AND RUSSIA: SYMBIOSIS OR COMPETITION?Ligia Corduneanu0Stefan Grigore1Ion Muschei2Centre for European Studies, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University IasiCentre for European Studies, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University IasiCentre for European Studies, Alexandru Ioan Cuza University IasiCooperation and trust between Russia and the European Union (EU), two of the most important international actors, have reached the lowest level since the Cold War. The main bone of contention has been the future of countries situated in Eastern Europe, in the so-called ‘in-between’/’buffer’ region. On the one hand, the EU aims at strengthening links with the six Eastern European partners – Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine – by encouraging reforms and by luring them to embrace European core values. However, Russia’s counteractions have mitigated the EU’s plans towards its vicinity - as the case of Ukraine best points out. Apart from the geopolitical competition over the ‘shared’ neighbourhood, the EU-Russia relation has started to depend heavily on the energy issues further complicating the already complex background. Russia uses the energy card as tool to influence the shape of the regional context, whereas the EU responds with a superior technological advantage and a more attractive economic and political agenda. Having this a backdrop, this paper aims to underline that a clear competition between the two players exists, fomented by a fundamental ideological difference in perceiving the outside world.http://www.ceswp.uaic.ro/articles/CESWP2014_VI2A_COR.pdfRussia; European Union; CrimeaEnergy; Commerce; Eastern and South-eastern Europe; soft power; hard powernormative power |
collection |
DOAJ |
language |
English |
format |
Article |
sources |
DOAJ |
author |
Ligia Corduneanu Stefan Grigore Ion Muschei |
spellingShingle |
Ligia Corduneanu Stefan Grigore Ion Muschei THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EU AND RUSSIA: SYMBIOSIS OR COMPETITION? CES Working Papers Russia; European Union; Crimea Energy; Commerce; Eastern and South-eastern Europe; soft power; hard power normative power |
author_facet |
Ligia Corduneanu Stefan Grigore Ion Muschei |
author_sort |
Ligia Corduneanu |
title |
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EU AND RUSSIA: SYMBIOSIS OR COMPETITION? |
title_short |
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EU AND RUSSIA: SYMBIOSIS OR COMPETITION? |
title_full |
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EU AND RUSSIA: SYMBIOSIS OR COMPETITION? |
title_fullStr |
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EU AND RUSSIA: SYMBIOSIS OR COMPETITION? |
title_full_unstemmed |
THE RELATIONSHIP BETWEEN EU AND RUSSIA: SYMBIOSIS OR COMPETITION? |
title_sort |
relationship between eu and russia: symbiosis or competition? |
publisher |
Alexandru Ioan Cuza University of Iasi |
series |
CES Working Papers |
issn |
2067-7693 |
publishDate |
2014-08-01 |
description |
Cooperation and trust between Russia and the European Union (EU), two of the most important international actors, have reached the lowest level since the Cold War. The main bone of contention has been the future of countries situated in Eastern Europe, in the so-called ‘in-between’/’buffer’ region. On the one hand, the EU aims at strengthening links with the six Eastern European partners – Armenia, Azerbaijan, Georgia, Belarus, Moldova and Ukraine – by encouraging reforms and by luring them to embrace European core values. However, Russia’s counteractions have mitigated the EU’s plans towards its vicinity - as the case of Ukraine best points out. Apart from the geopolitical competition over the ‘shared’ neighbourhood, the EU-Russia relation has started to depend heavily on the energy issues further complicating the already complex background. Russia uses the energy card as tool to influence the shape of the regional context, whereas the EU responds with a superior technological advantage and a more attractive economic and political agenda. Having this a backdrop, this paper aims to underline that a clear competition between the two players exists, fomented by a fundamental ideological difference in perceiving the outside world. |
topic |
Russia; European Union; Crimea Energy; Commerce; Eastern and South-eastern Europe; soft power; hard power normative power |
url |
http://www.ceswp.uaic.ro/articles/CESWP2014_VI2A_COR.pdf |
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