Empires of Eurasia: How Imperial Legacies Shape International Security
How the collapse of empires helps explain the efforts of China, Iran, Russia, and Turkey to challenge the international order
 
“This is a must read to understand the backstory of conflicts from Crimea to Xinjiang.”—Fiona Hill, author of There Is Nothing for You Here
 
Eurasia’s major powers—China, Iran, Russia, and Turkey—increasingly intervene across their borders while seeking to pull their smaller neighbors more firmly into their respective orbits. While analysts have focused on the role of leaders such as Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in explaining this drive to dominate neighbors and pull away from the Western-dominated international system, they have paid less attention to the role of imperial legacies. Jeffrey Mankoff argues that what unites these contemporary Eurasian powers is their status as heirs to vast terrestrial empires, whose collapse left all four states deeply entangled with the lands and peoples along their peripheries but outside their formal borders. Today, they have all found new opportunities to project power within and beyond their borders in patterns shaped by their respective imperial pasts.
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Empires of Eurasia: How Imperial Legacies Shape International Security
How the collapse of empires helps explain the efforts of China, Iran, Russia, and Turkey to challenge the international order
 
“This is a must read to understand the backstory of conflicts from Crimea to Xinjiang.”—Fiona Hill, author of There Is Nothing for You Here
 
Eurasia’s major powers—China, Iran, Russia, and Turkey—increasingly intervene across their borders while seeking to pull their smaller neighbors more firmly into their respective orbits. While analysts have focused on the role of leaders such as Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in explaining this drive to dominate neighbors and pull away from the Western-dominated international system, they have paid less attention to the role of imperial legacies. Jeffrey Mankoff argues that what unites these contemporary Eurasian powers is their status as heirs to vast terrestrial empires, whose collapse left all four states deeply entangled with the lands and peoples along their peripheries but outside their formal borders. Today, they have all found new opportunities to project power within and beyond their borders in patterns shaped by their respective imperial pasts.
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Empires of Eurasia: How Imperial Legacies Shape International Security

Empires of Eurasia: How Imperial Legacies Shape International Security

by Jeffrey Mankoff
Empires of Eurasia: How Imperial Legacies Shape International Security

Empires of Eurasia: How Imperial Legacies Shape International Security

by Jeffrey Mankoff

Hardcover

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Overview

How the collapse of empires helps explain the efforts of China, Iran, Russia, and Turkey to challenge the international order
 
“This is a must read to understand the backstory of conflicts from Crimea to Xinjiang.”—Fiona Hill, author of There Is Nothing for You Here
 
Eurasia’s major powers—China, Iran, Russia, and Turkey—increasingly intervene across their borders while seeking to pull their smaller neighbors more firmly into their respective orbits. While analysts have focused on the role of leaders such as Vladimir Putin and Recep Tayyip Erdoğan in explaining this drive to dominate neighbors and pull away from the Western-dominated international system, they have paid less attention to the role of imperial legacies. Jeffrey Mankoff argues that what unites these contemporary Eurasian powers is their status as heirs to vast terrestrial empires, whose collapse left all four states deeply entangled with the lands and peoples along their peripheries but outside their formal borders. Today, they have all found new opportunities to project power within and beyond their borders in patterns shaped by their respective imperial pasts.

Product Details

ISBN-13: 9780300248258
Publisher: Yale University Press
Publication date: 04/19/2022
Pages: 384
Sales rank: 519,303
Product dimensions: 6.12(w) x 9.25(h) x (d)

About the Author

Jeffrey Mankoff is a Distinguished Research Fellow at the U.S. National Defense University’s Institute for National Strategic Studies, and the author of Russian Foreign Policy: The Return of Great Power Politics.

Table of Contents

Acknowledgments ix

A Note on Transliteration xi

Introduction 1

Russia 16

1 Russian Identity Between Empire and Nation 23

2 Russia's Borderlands and the Territorialization of Identity 44

3 Russia's Near Abroad and the Geopolitics of Empire 60

Turkey 81

4 Those Who Call Themselves Turks: Empire, Islam, and Nation 89

5 On the Margins of the Nation and the State: Turkey's Kurdish Borderland 107

6 The Geopolitics of the Post-Ottoman Space 123

Iran 145

7 Iranian Identity and Iran's "Empire of the Mind" 153

8 Iran's Borderlands: The Non-Persian Periphery 169

9 Greater Iran (Iranzamin) and Iran's Imperial Imagination 189

China 207

10 Civilization and Imperial Identity in China 213

11 China's Inner Asian Borderlands 231

12 Sinocentrism and the Geopolitics of Tianxia 251

Conclusion: A World Safe for Empire? 269

Notes 277

Index 343

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