Bibtex export
@book{ Inozemtsev2015, title = {Russia of 2010s: How to Live with It and How to Outlive It}, author = {Inozemtsev, Vladislav L.}, year = {2015}, series = {DGAP kompakt}, pages = {9}, volume = {7}, address = {Berlin}, publisher = {Forschungsinstitut der Deutschen Gesellschaft für Auswärtige Politik e.V.}, issn = {2198-5936}, urn = {https://nbn-resolving.org/urn:nbn:de:0168-ssoar-53921-1}, abstract = {Several factors call for the West to rethink the course the "new Russia" is taking. These include Moscow's annexation of Crimea and its intense involvement in destabilizing the post-Soviet states; Russia's increasingly tough position toward both the European Union and the United States and its increasingly strong ties to China; and the Russian leadership's obvious preoccupation with political rather than economic issues. The paper suggests that the Russia of Vladimir Putin's new term in power, as a system, differs profoundly from the country the West was dealing with in the previous decade. Russia’s transition from a promising Westernized nation into an aggressive authoritarian regional power is nearing completion. Western powers should therefore concentrate on two things: elaborating appropriate - and realistic - political attitudes toward today's Russia and creating an agenda for dealing with a post-Putin Russia that may arise in the distant future.}, keywords = {international relations; politische Beziehungen; Westmächte; Western powers; Annäherungspolitik; foreign policy; Putin, V.; policy of rapprochement; politische Einstellung; Russland; power politics; Russia; Machtpolitik; Außenpolitik; political attitude; internationale Beziehungen; political relations; Putin, V.}}