Rowman & Littlefield Publishers
Pages: 382
Trim: 6½ x 9¼
978-0-7425-2965-6 • Hardback • January 2004 • $177.00 • (£137.00) - Currently out of stock. Copies will arrive soon.
978-0-7425-2966-3 • Paperback • December 2003 • $77.00 • (£59.00)
978-1-4616-4675-4 • eBook • December 2003 • $73.00 • (£56.00)
J. L. Black is professor emeritus of Russian and Soviet history and director of the Centre for Research on Canadian-Russian Relations (CRCR), Carleton University, Ottawa.
Chapter 1 Introduction: Where We Were in January 2000
Part 2 Part I: Two and a Half Years of Foreign Policy Experimenting
Chapter 3 Yeltsin's Legacy 1999
Chapter 4 Setting the Stage
Chapter 5 Summitry and Beyond
Chapter 6 Negotiating from Strength
Chapter 7 The Mandate Revisited
Chapter 8 From Axis of Evil to Vladimir and George
Chapter 9 Wind Down
Part 10 Part II: The Two-Headed Eagle Looks east and West
Chapter 11 Debating Security and Defense
Chapter 12 The Caucasus Vortex
Chapter 13 Ukraine and Belarus
Chapter 14 Reintegrating Eurasia: The CIS and Central Asia
Chapter 15 Reintegrating Eurasia: Courting China and India
Chapter 16 The Rogue States
Chapter 17 Conclusion: Where We Were in May 2002
[Black] highlights some interesting but neglected source material and, in doing so, provides an important counterbalance to the western-based analyses that dominate foreign thinking about Russia. More generally, his detailed description of events, policy statements, and international agreements offers a good reference base to scholars in the field.
— International Affairs
Black's book is the most massively detailed examination of the foreign policy of Putin available, as far as I know, anywhere.
— The Virginia Quarterly Review
Professor Black gives us the Russian view of the world by examining the first years of the Putin presidency. The book is, first, detailed history of the regime's foreign policy from December 1999 to May 2002. Second, it presents an analysis of the main areas of foreign policy concern. The sources are almost entirely Russian, which provides the reader with invaluable insights into the political mind of the Russian leadership, particularly that of Putin….Splendid book.
— J. Frank Harrison, St. Xavier University; International Journal, Spring 2005
Black presents the results of extensive research in the Russian press on key issues in Russian foreign policy from early 2000 through the middle of 2002. Recommended.
— Choice Reviews