Understanding the Ukrainian Conflict from the Perspective of Post-Soviet Decolonization

B. Kang
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Abstract

Abstract:This article aims to explain the causes (in particular, the motives and objectives of Russia's actions) of the Ukrainian conflict from a decolonization perspective and its impact on Eurasian interstate and West-Russia relations. Russia's positioning in Eurasian decolonization is identified as "defensive." This defensive position as a postimperial metropole has been constructed by combining its "semiperipheral" status within the liberal international order with the assertiveness of a "neocolonial" power challenged by "post-colonial" independent countries in Eurasia. To a certain extent, the annexation of Crimea was merely an illegitimate settlement of disputes over property rights between two countries, in that the seizure of Crimea occurred in a combination of several factors at various levels. As a result, the motives and objectives of a Russian invasion can be regarded as neither a challenge to the whole post–Cold War European order nor irredentism to reclaim the territory of the Soviet empire. Consequently, post-Crimea development could herald the closing stage of the historical period called the post-Soviet era as the period of Eurasian decolonization.
从后苏联非殖民化的视角看乌克兰冲突
摘要:本文旨在从非殖民化的角度分析乌克兰冲突的起因(特别是俄罗斯行动的动机和目的)及其对欧亚国家间和西俄关系的影响。俄罗斯在欧亚非殖民化中的定位被认为是“防御性的”。这种作为后帝国主义大都市的防御地位是通过将其在自由主义国际秩序中的“半外围”地位与欧亚大陆“后殖民”独立国家所挑战的“新殖民”大国的自信相结合而建立起来的。在某种程度上,克里米亚的吞并仅仅是两国之间产权纠纷的一种非法解决,因为克里米亚的吞并是多种因素在不同层面上共同作用的结果。因此,俄罗斯入侵的动机和目标既不能被视为对整个冷战后欧洲秩序的挑战,也不能被视为收复苏联帝国领土的民族统一主义。因此,后克里米亚的发展可能预示着被称为后苏联时代的历史时期的结束阶段,即欧亚非殖民化时期。
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
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