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List of contents
Introduction: Understanding the Dynamics of Turkey’s Pivot to Eurasia Chapter 1 Turkey and the West: Geopolitical Shifts in the AK Party Era Chapter 2 The Return of Eurasianism in Turkey: Relations with Russia and Beyond Chapter 3 Turkey’s Ambiguous Strategic Rapprochement with Russia Chapter 4 Heading towards the East? Sino-Turkish Relations after the July 15 Coup Attempt Chapter 5 Turkey’s Economic Expectations from a Rising China Chapter 6 Turkey and the Shanghai Cooperation Organization: Common Values, Economics or Pure Geopolitics Chapter 7 Geopolitics, Identity and Beyond: Turkey’s Renewed Interest in the Caucasus and Central Asia Chapter 8 Turkey’s Energy Security in Eurasia: Trade-offs or Cognitive Bias? Chapter 9 Dynamics of Estrangement and Realignment in Turkey-Iran Relations in the 2000s: Exploring the U.S. Dimension Chapter 10 Turkey and India: A Relationship in Progress Chapter 11 Politics of New Developmentalism: Turkey, BRICS and Beyond
About the author
Emre Erşen is an Associate Professor at Marmara University’s Department of Political Science and International Relations in Istanbul, Turkey. He received his PhD from the same department. He also conducted research at the Higher School of Economics (Russia), Institute for Human Sciences (Austria), University of Kent (United Kingdom) and Jagiellonian University (Poland) as a visiting scholar. He has written for a number of academic publications including Geopolitics, Turkish Studies, Energy Policy, Insight Turkey, Journal of Eurasian Studies and Perceptions: Journal of International Affairs. He also contributed many conference papers on Turkish-Russian relations, Eurasianism and Turkish geopolitics.
Seçkin Köstem is an Assistant Professor of International Relations at Bilkent University in Ankara, Turkey. He received his PhD from McGill University in 2016. In Fall 2018, he was a George F. Kennan Fellow at the Kennan Institute in Washington, DC. He has been a visiting researcher at Columbia University’s Harriman Institute, New York University’s Jordan Center, King’s College London’s Russia Institute and the Moscow State Institute of International Relations (MGIMO). His research focuses on Russian and Turkish foreign economic policies, regional and rising powers, and Turkish-Russian relations. His articles have been published in journals such as Review of International Political Economy, Foreign Policy Analysis, Global Policy and Perceptions: Journal of International Affairs.
Summary
This book discusses and analyses the dimensions of Turkey’s strategic rapprochement with the Eurasian states and institutions since the deterioration of Ankara’s relations with its traditional NATO allies.