China, Russia and Central Asian Infrastructure: Fragmenting or Reformatting the Region?. Krasnopolsky, P. Springer Nature, Singapore, 2022.
China, Russia and Central Asian Infrastructure: Fragmenting or Reformatting the Region? [link]Paper  doi  abstract   bibtex   
The book evaluates Central Asian regionalism by analyzing the impact of Russia and China on physical infrastructure. The study covers the 30-year period after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, with a focus on the decade preceding the pandemic. Multiple case studies of projects in the networked sectors of infrastructure demonstrate the impact of major powers’ engagement on regional connectivity. The book is of interest to the scholars of international relations in Eurasia, Sino-Russian relations, China’s foreign policy, Russia’s policy in the former Soviet space, international institutions in Asia, and regionalism. The empirical depth contributes to Central Asia area studies. The in-depth cases on multilateral financial institutions and regional networks, particularly energy, transportation and telecommunication, would be of great value to those interested in these sectors.
@book{krasnopolsky_china_2022,
	address = {Singapore},
	series = {Palgrave {Series} in {Asia} and {Pacific} {Studies}},
	title = {China, {Russia} and {Central} {Asian} {Infrastructure}: {Fragmenting} or {Reformatting} the {Region}?},
	isbn = {978-981-19425-3-2 978-981-19425-4-9},
	shorttitle = {China, {Russia} and {Central} {Asian} {Infrastructure}},
	url = {https://link.springer.com/10.1007/978-981-19-4254-9},
	abstract = {The book evaluates Central Asian regionalism by analyzing the impact of Russia and China on physical infrastructure. The study covers the 30-year period after the dissolution of the Soviet Union, with a focus on the decade preceding the pandemic. Multiple case studies of projects in the networked sectors of infrastructure demonstrate the impact of major powers’ engagement on regional connectivity. The book is of interest to the scholars of international relations in Eurasia, Sino-Russian relations, China’s foreign policy, Russia’s policy in the former Soviet space, international institutions in Asia, and regionalism. The empirical depth contributes to Central Asia area studies. The in-depth cases on multilateral financial institutions and regional networks, particularly energy, transportation and telecommunication, would be of great value to those interested in these sectors.},
	language = {en},
	urldate = {2022-10-05},
	publisher = {Springer Nature},
	author = {Krasnopolsky, Peter},
	year = {2022},
	doi = {10.1007/978-981-19-4254-9},
	keywords = {asia, china, infrastructure, russia},
}

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