Search engine for discovering works of Art, research articles, and books related to Art and Culture
ShareThis
Javascript must be enabled to continue!

Eurasia on the Edge

View through CrossRef
Eurasia, wherever one draws the boundaries, is very much at the centre of discussions about today’s world. Security across Eurasia is a global concern and has been subject to a range of discussions and debate. However, the current tensions over security and world order, with the growing challenges from Eurasia and Asia, require more intense scrutiny. The goals of the book are to explore the challenges facing the region and to assess how to achieve economic, social and political stability in the Eurasian core. The book’s chapters are written by prominent experts in the field, and together contribute to the continuing debate by providing policy advice for managing crises in the region. Conflicts inevitably arise in the Eurasian space as global powers, regional powers and individual states jockey for positions and influence. These conflicts need not reach a crisis state provided the foundations of conflict, and the surrounding frameworks, can be better understood. To do this, it is necessary to examine the issue of security in Eurasia from a multi-dimensional perspective that challenges any and all assumptions about Eurasia and global order. This volume has two overarching goals. The first is to come to a better understanding of key security threats in the Eurasian region from a multi-dimensional – social, political, economic and institutional - perspective. The second is to discuss policies directed to increase mutual security in and around the Eurasian core. Although the crisis of security affects the whole continent, the area covered by the former Soviet Union and its neighborhood is at the epicenter of the current crisis. On the one side, the Atlantic community is consolidating and extending. On the other, various ‘greater Asia’ ideas are in the making. All of Eurasia is in danger of becoming an extended shatter zone, a vast new, shaky ‘borderland’ trapped between two great systems of power and world order.
Lexington Books
Title: Eurasia on the Edge
Description:
Eurasia, wherever one draws the boundaries, is very much at the centre of discussions about today’s world.
Security across Eurasia is a global concern and has been subject to a range of discussions and debate.
However, the current tensions over security and world order, with the growing challenges from Eurasia and Asia, require more intense scrutiny.
The goals of the book are to explore the challenges facing the region and to assess how to achieve economic, social and political stability in the Eurasian core.
The book’s chapters are written by prominent experts in the field, and together contribute to the continuing debate by providing policy advice for managing crises in the region.
Conflicts inevitably arise in the Eurasian space as global powers, regional powers and individual states jockey for positions and influence.
These conflicts need not reach a crisis state provided the foundations of conflict, and the surrounding frameworks, can be better understood.
To do this, it is necessary to examine the issue of security in Eurasia from a multi-dimensional perspective that challenges any and all assumptions about Eurasia and global order.
This volume has two overarching goals.
The first is to come to a better understanding of key security threats in the Eurasian region from a multi-dimensional – social, political, economic and institutional - perspective.
The second is to discuss policies directed to increase mutual security in and around the Eurasian core.
Although the crisis of security affects the whole continent, the area covered by the former Soviet Union and its neighborhood is at the epicenter of the current crisis.
On the one side, the Atlantic community is consolidating and extending.
On the other, various ‘greater Asia’ ideas are in the making.
All of Eurasia is in danger of becoming an extended shatter zone, a vast new, shaky ‘borderland’ trapped between two great systems of power and world order.

Related Results

Magic graphs
Magic graphs
DE LA TESIS<br/>Si un graf G admet un etiquetament super edge magic, aleshores G es diu que és un graf super edge màgic. La tesis està principalment enfocada a l'estudi del c...
AI-driven zero-touch orchestration of edge-cloud services
AI-driven zero-touch orchestration of edge-cloud services
(English) 6G networks demand orchestration systems capable of managing thousands of distributed microservices under sub-millisecond latency constraints. Traditional centralized app...
Optimizing edge cloud deployments for video analytics
Optimizing edge cloud deployments for video analytics
(English) As our digital world and physical realities blend together, we, as users, are growing to expect real-time interaction wherever and whenever we want. Newer internet servic...
Product of digraphs, (super) edge-magic valences and related problems
Product of digraphs, (super) edge-magic valences and related problems
Discrete Mathematics, and in particular Graph Theory, has gained a lot of popularity during the last 7 decades. Among the many branches in Graph Theory, graph labelings has experim...
Impact of Summer North Atlantic Sea Surface Temperature Tripole on Precipitation over Mid&#8211;High-Latitude Eurasia
Impact of Summer North Atlantic Sea Surface Temperature Tripole on Precipitation over Mid&#8211;High-Latitude Eurasia
Eurasia is a sensitive and high-risk region for global climate changes, where climate anomalies significantly influence natural ecosystems, human health, and economic development. ...
THE FORCING EDGE FIXING EDGE-TO-VERTEX MONOPHONIC NUMBER OF A GRAPH
THE FORCING EDGE FIXING EDGE-TO-VERTEX MONOPHONIC NUMBER OF A GRAPH
For a connected graph G = (V, E), a set Se ⊆ E(G)–{e} is called an edge fixing edge-to-vertex monophonic set of an edge e of a connected graph G if every vertex of G lies on an e –...
The upper connected edge geodetic number of a graph
The upper connected edge geodetic number of a graph
For a non-trivial connected graph G, a set S ? V (G) is called an edge geodetic set of G if every edge of G is contained in a geodesic joining some pair of vertices in S. The...
Paleomagnetic results from the western Himalaya indicate multi-stage India-Eurasia collision
Paleomagnetic results from the western Himalaya indicate multi-stage India-Eurasia collision
&lt;p&gt;The classical model for the collision between India and Eurasia, which resulted in the formation of the Himalayan orogeny, is a single-stage continent-continent co...

Back to Top