AAU Student Projects - visit Aalborg University's student projects portal
A master's thesis from Aalborg University
Book cover


Russia’s Power in the Near Abroad, Illustrated in the Case of Ukraine

Author

Term

4. term

Publication year

2014

Submitted on

Pages

55

Abstract

Dette speciale undersøger, hvordan Rusland udøver magt i det nære udland (russisk betegnelse for nabolande i det tidligere Sovjet), med særligt fokus på Ukraine og russiske diasporaer (personer af russisk oprindelse, der bor uden for Rusland). Arbejdet bygger på tre dele: For det første gennemgås teorier om magt i international politik, med vægt på skiftet fra at forstå magt som ressourcer til at se magt som noget, der udspiller sig i relationer og adfærd. Disse ideer kobles til de internationale teorier, der præger Ruslands udenrigspolitik. For det andet udvikles en begrebsmæssig kobling mellem diasporaer og magt, fordi klassiske magtteorier sjældent inddrager diasporaer. Her undersøges, om og hvordan diasporaer kan påvirke magtforhold mellem stater. For det tredje opstilles en særlig ramme for at analysere russiske diasporaer i det nære udland, med fokus på, hvordan diasporaer bliver politisk og sociologisk konstrueret, og hvordan de relaterer til Ruslands bløde magt (indflydelse gennem kultur, sprog, medier og normer frem for militær magt). Med denne tredelte ramme vurderes Ruslands magt i det nære udland og i Ukraine. Særligt analyseres besættelsen af Krim og situationen i det sydøstlige Ukraine ud fra den udviklede magtforståelse.

This thesis examines how Russia exercises power in the near abroad (a Russian term for neighboring post-Soviet states), with a focus on Ukraine and on Russian diasporas (people of Russian origin living outside Russia). The study is built in three parts: First, it reviews international relations theories of power, highlighting a shift from seeing power as resources to understanding power as relational behavior, and links these ideas to the theories that inform Russia’s foreign policy. Second, because standard power theories rarely address diasporas, it develops a conceptual link between diasporas and power, asking whether and how diasporas can shape power relations between states. Third, it proposes a specific framework for studying Russian diasporas in the near abroad, analyzing how diasporas are politically and sociologically constructed and how they connect to Russia’s soft power (influence through culture, language, media, and norms rather than military force). Using this three-part framework, the thesis assesses Russia’s power in the near abroad and in Ukraine, in particular the occupation of Crimea and the situation in southeastern Ukraine.

[This abstract was generated with the help of AI]