Small States, Russia and the West: Polarity, Constellations and Heterogeneity in the Geopolitics of the Caucasus
Bush House North East Wing, Strand Campus, London
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Employing the IR concept of small states as an analytical framework, it investigates the contrasting foreign policies of the three Caucasus states – Armenia, Azerbaijan and Georgia – in response to the Russian interventions in Georgia in 2008 and Ukraine in 2014 and 2022, which marked Russia's ‘return’ as an order-forming power, challenging the agenda of Euro-Atlantic integration.
The author expands and adapts constellation theory to examine emerging non-Western regional orders, using a relational polarity explanatory tool to argue that the choices of Armenia, Azerbaijan, and Georgia are not merely products of Russian or Western influence but are shaped by each state's unique geocultural choices, distinct asymmetric relationships with divergent power poles, and differing perceptions of reality. This book enriches the emerging discourse on the regional complexities of the multipolar world order with multifaceted interpretations of politics and decision-making through its nuanced regional focus and innovative theoretical grounding. It contributes to IR theory, geopolitics, small-states and area studies, offering invaluable insights into small-state foreign policy dynamics in the age of rising confrontational multipolarity.
The talk will be taking place in Bush House North East, room 1.03.
SPEAKER
Eduard Abrahamyan is a Senior Research Fellow at the Institute for Security Analysis and a Postgraduate Teaching Fellow at University College London. He previously served as a Teaching Fellow at the University of Leicester from 2021 to 2022, where he obtained his PhD in 2023, focusing on the geopolitics of small states between Russia and the West. From 2019 to 2021, Dr Abrahamyan served as an Aide to the President of the Republic of Armenia on foreign affairs. In 2017, he was a Rumsfeld Fellow and Visiting Scholar at the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute of the American Foreign Policy Council. He has contributed regularly to prominent think tanks and professional platforms, including the Jamestown Foundation, the American Foreign Policy Research Institute, the Central Asia-Caucasus Institute, and The National Interest, among others.
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