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The Conflict in Ukraine and Contemporary Imperialism Radhika Desaia, Alan Freemanb and Boris Kagarlitskyc
     Release time: 2017-03-16

 

 

a Department of Political Studies and Geopolitical Economy Research Group, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada;

b Geopolitical Economy Research Group, University of Manitoba, Winnipeg, Canada;

c Institute for Globalization Studies and Social Movements, Moscow, Russia

 

ABSTRACT

In this introduction, we provide an overall framing of the articles that follow by placing the Ukraine conflict which today embroils the West in confrontation with Russia, within an historical account of the geopolitical economy of contemporary capitalism and the dynamics of imperialism in the twenty-first century, taking particular account of the decline of US and Western power and the rise of other centres of economic and military power, which are able to resist and contest Western power. We pay particular attention to how today’s geopolitical flashpoints, of which Ukraine is among the most critical, emerged to belie post-Cold War expectations of a “peace dividend” and a “unipolar” world, clearly distinguishing the US and the EU roles in these processes. Given the widespread tendency in the West to label Russia “imperialist,” particularly after the integration of Crimea into the Russian Federation, we end our discussion with a consideration of this question which concludes that the term, while it continues to be an appropriate description of the pattern of Western actions, is not so for that of Russian ones.

 

KEYWORDS

Ukraine; Russia; NATO; EU; geopolitical economy; post- Cold War; multipolarity; US; Germany

 

From: International Critical Thought 2016 6 (4)

Editor: Wang Yi

 

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