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The long game on the Silk Road US and EU strategy for Central Asia and the Caucasus S. Frederick Starr, Svante E. Cornell.

By: Starr, S. FrrickContributor(s): Cornell, Svante EMaterial type: TextTextPublisher: Lanham, Maryland Rowman & Littlefield, [2018]Description: 1 online resourceISBN: 9781538114650; 1538114658Subject(s): United States -- Foreign relations -- Asia, Central | Asia, Central -- Foreign relations -- United States | United States -- Foreign relations -- Caucasus | Caucasus -- Foreign relations -- United States | Europe -- Foreign relations -- Asia, Central | Asia, Central -- Foreign relations -- Europe | Europe -- Foreign relations -- Caucasus | Caucasus -- Foreign relations -- Europe | POLITICAL SCIENCE / Government / International | POLITICAL SCIENCE / International Relations / GeneralGenre/Form: EBSCO eBooks | Electronic books. DDC classification: 327.7305 LOC classification: DS33.4.U6Online resources: EBSCOhost Summary: "This book argues that American and European policies toward Central Asia and the Caucasus suffer from both conceptual and structural impediments. It traces the framework of Western policies to the 1975 Helsinki Final Act, which resulted in the stovepiping of relations into political, economic, and democracy categories - and in often uncoordinated or contradictory policies. While the authors embrace the goal of promoting human rights and democracy, they argue that the antagonistic methods adopted to advance this goal have proven counter-productive. They propose that Western governments work with the regional states rather than on or against them; and that instead of focusing directly on political systems, policies should focus on developing the quality of governance and help build institutions that will be building blocks of rule of law and democracy in the long term. The authors also argue that Western leaders have largely failed to grasp the significance of this region, relegated it to a subordinate status and thus damaging western interests. The development of sovereign, economically strong, and effectively self-governing states in the Caucasus and Central Asia is an important goal in its own right; the book stresses the importance of a region where the development and preservation of secular statehood could become a model for the entire Muslim world."-- Provided by publisher.
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Online resource; title from PDF title page (EBSCO, viewed February 20, 2018).

Includes bibliographical references and index.

"This book argues that American and European policies toward Central Asia and the Caucasus suffer from both conceptual and structural impediments. It traces the framework of Western policies to the 1975 Helsinki Final Act, which resulted in the stovepiping of relations into political, economic, and democracy categories - and in often uncoordinated or contradictory policies. While the authors embrace the goal of promoting human rights and democracy, they argue that the antagonistic methods adopted to advance this goal have proven counter-productive. They propose that Western governments work with the regional states rather than on or against them; and that instead of focusing directly on political systems, policies should focus on developing the quality of governance and help build institutions that will be building blocks of rule of law and democracy in the long term. The authors also argue that Western leaders have largely failed to grasp the significance of this region, relegated it to a subordinate status and thus damaging western interests. The development of sovereign, economically strong, and effectively self-governing states in the Caucasus and Central Asia is an important goal in its own right; the book stresses the importance of a region where the development and preservation of secular statehood could become a model for the entire Muslim world."-- Provided by publisher.

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