Empires of Eurasia and West-centric World Order: How the Past Shapes the Future of the International System
https://doi.org/10.46272/2221-3279-2022-1-2-13-207-215
About the Author
V. M. ZhornistRussian Federation
Vera M. Zhornist — postgraduate student, Department of Applied International Analysis
76 Prospect Vernadskogo, Moscow, 119454
References
1. Bacevich A.J. (2009) American Empire. Harvard University Press, 312 p.
2. Behr H., Stivachtis Y.A. (ed.) (2015) Revisiting the European Union as empire. Routledge, 252 p.
3. Breuilly J. (2017) Modern Empires and Nation-States. Thesis Eleven 139(1): 11–29.
4. Burbach R., Tarbell J. (2004) Imperial Overstretch: George W. Bush and the hubris of empire. Zed Books, 252 p.
5. Cox M. (2007) Still the American Empire. Political Studies Review. 5(1): 1–10.
6. Doyle M.W. (1986) Empires. Cornell University Press, 408 p.
7. Hall J. A., Malešević S. (ed.). (2013) Nationalism and War. Cambridge University Press, 372 p.
8. Münkler H. (2007) Empires: the Logic of World Domination from Ancient Rome to the United States. Polity, 248 p.
9. Terrill R. (2003) The New Chinese Empire. UNSW Press, 282 p.
10. Van Herpen M.H. (2015) Putin’s Wars: the Rise of Russia’s New Imperialism. Rowman & Littlefield, 296 p.
11. Van Kemenade W. (2010) China, Hong Kong, Taiwan, Inc.: the Dynamics of a New Empire. Vintage, 476 p.
12. Watson A. (1992) The Evolution of International Society: a Comparative historical Analysis. Routledge: London, 384 p.
Review
For citations:
Zhornist V.M. Empires of Eurasia and West-centric World Order: How the Past Shapes the Future of the International System. Comparative Politics Russia. 2022;13(1-2):207-215. (In Russ.) https://doi.org/10.46272/2221-3279-2022-1-2-13-207-215