Title of article :
The narratives of exclusion and self-exclusion in the Russian conflict discourse on EU–Russian Relations
Author/Authors :
Sergei Prozorov، نويسنده ,
Issue Information :
روزنامه با شماره پیاپی سال 2007
Abstract :
The article focuses on the interplay of the narratives of ‘exclusion’ and ‘self-exclusion’ in the Russian discourse on EU–Russian relations. Since the late 1990s, this discourse has acquired an increasingly conflictual orientation, whereby the official foreign policy objectives of ‘strategic partnership’ with the EU and Russiaʹs ‘integration with Europe’ are increasingly problematised across the entire Russian political spectrum. In the analysis of the Russian conflict discourse we shall identify two at first glance opposed narratives. Firstly, the EU enlargement has raised the issue of the expansion of the Schengen visa regime for Russian citizens, travelling to Europe. Particularly acute with regard to Kaliningrad Oblastʹ, this issue has also generated a wider identity-related discourse on the EUʹs exclusionary policies towards Russia. Secondly, the perception of Russiaʹs passive or subordinate status in EU–Russian cooperative arrangements at national, regional and local levels resulted in the problematisation of the insufficiently reciprocal or intersubjective nature of the EU–Russian ‘partnership’ and the increasing tendency towards Russiaʹs ‘self-exclusion’ from integrative processes, grounded in the reaffirmation of state sovereignty that generally characterises the Putin presidency. This article concludes with the interpretation of the two conflict narratives in the wider context of debates around the project of European integration.
Keywords :
Russia , Geopolitics , liberalism , Integration , CONSERVATISM , CONFLICT , Discourse , European Union
Journal title :
Political Geography
Journal title :
Political Geography