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The war in Ukraine will continue to affect patterns of cooperation and confrontation in the Black Sea region for years to come, critically undermining Russia as a viable alternative partner for deeper political and economic integration, but also revealing that the EU has only partially succeeded in stabilising its neighbourhood.
List of contents
ContentsAbbreviations
Author's Biography
Acknowledgement
1. Introduction by Lucie Tungul
2. Security and Regional Dynamics in the Black Sea Region by Magda B. Leichtová
3. Ukraine between Western Civilization and the Russian World by Petr Hlavá¿ek
4. Decolonising National Identity: Language and Region in Ukraine by Radomyr Mokryk
5. Turks versus the West: Civilisational Populism in Turkey by Gökhan Bacik and Serkan Seker
6. The Eurasian Turn(s) in Turkish Discourse on Europe - Occidentalism versus Orientalism by Catherine MacMillan
7. De(Democratisation) in Ukraine and Turkey: Ideological Transformation and Changining Mediascapes by Valeria Korablyova and Jacob Maze
8. Turkey and Ukraine Strategic Positioning: Economic, Energy and Military Cooperation in the Geopolitical Landscape between the European Union and Russia by Rabia Karakaya Polat and Michal Lebduška
9. Exploring Environmental Governance: The EU's influence on Civil Society in Turkey and Ukraine by Lucie Tungul
10. Conclusion by Lucie Tungul and Petr Hlavá¿ek
About the author
Lucie Tungul is Assistant Professor at the Department of Politics and Social Sciences, Law Faculty, Palacký University. She holds degrees from Miami University, Ohio (international relations), and Palacký University (politics and European studies). She was a faculty member at Fatih University, Istanbul (2006- 2014). She is a member of the Czech Political Science Association executive board and Wilfried Martens Centre for European Studies Academic Council. She has published numerous articles, book chapters, books and policy papers on Europeanisation, democratisation, Euroscepticism, migration processes and identity discourses.
Summary
The war in Ukraine will continue to affect patterns of cooperation and confrontation in the Black Sea region for years to come, critically undermining Russia as a viable alternative partner for deeper political and economic integration, but also revealing that the EU has only partially succeeded in stabilising its neighbourhood.