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Dossier

Geopolitical Power Plays in Central Asia

Eleonora Tafuro Ambrosetti
03 ottobre 2019

Through the new EU Central Asia strategy, Brussels seems determined to breathe new life into its efforts to “court” Central Asia. But the EU is neither the only international player interested in the region nor is it the most influential one. No doubt Central Asia’s strategic importance in international affairs is growing: in between Asia and Europe, the region is considered by Russia and Turkey as part of their spheres of influence and is at the heart of the three mainland routes of China’s Belt and Road Initiative (BRI). This dossier looks at the different dimensions of Central Asia’s geopolitical relevance, in light of the latest developments brought about by two landmark political transitions in the region: the end of the regimes of Nursultan Nazarbayev in Kazakhstan and Islam Karimov in Uzbekistan. The dossier also lingers on the rivalries among different regional and international actors, whose strategic interests in the Central Asian region may clash.

A Central Asian decade?
Eleonora Tafuro Ambrosetti
ISPI
A New EU Strategy for Central Asia: From Challenges to Opportunities
Jos Boonstra
Centre for European Security Studies
Transitions in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan: Implications for the West
Charles Sullivan
Nazarbayev University
The Importance of Central Asia for Russia’s Foreign Policy
Leonid Gusev
MGIMO
Central Asia: One of China’s Favourite Peripheries
Giulia Sciorati
ISPI
The Power of the Quiet? Turkey’s Central Asia Strategy
Seçkin Köstem
Bilkent University
Central Asian States: Is Intra-Regional Integration Possible?
Benno Zogg
ETH Zurich
The Future of Energy in Central Asia
Aliya Tskhay
University of St Andrews
Foreign Fighters from Central Asia: Between Renunciation and Repatriation
Elena Zhirukhina
Prague Institute of International Relations

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Tags

Asia Russia China
Versione stampabile

EDITED BY

Eleonora Tafuro Ambrosetti
ISPI Research Fellow

This Dossier is published as part of a research project on Italy-Central Asia relations amidst changing international balances of power. The project is realised also thanks to the support of the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation.

 

The opinions expressed in this Dossier are those of the authors. They do not reflect the opinions or views of ISPI or the Italian Ministry of Foreign Affairs and International Cooperation.

 

Cover photo by Chiara Lovotti

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