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Search: L773:1047 4552 OR L773:1527 1935

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1.
  • Jonsson, Stefan, 1961-, et al. (author)
  • A Statue to Nasser? : Eurafrica, the Colonial Roots of European Integration, and the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize
  • 2013
  • In: Mediterranean Quarterly. - Durham & London : Duke University Press. - 1047-4552 .- 1527-1935. ; 24:4, s. 5-18
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • In response to a widespread idea of the European Union as a “peace project,” an idea disseminated especially after the EU received the 2012 Nobel Peace Prize, this essay retrieves some of the historical causes of the foundation of the European Economic Community (EEC) in 1957. The essay emphasizes specific geopolitical and colonial incentives that had lain behind the European integration project ever since the pan-European blueprints the interwar period and which became critical with the Suez crisis and decolonization movements of the 1950s. As the essay demonstrates, practically all of the visions, movements, and concrete institutional arrangements working toward European integration during this period placed Africa’s incorporation into the European enterprise as a central objective. As much of the scholarly, political, and journalistic accounts at the time testify, European integration was inextricably bound up with a Eurafrican project. According to the intellectual, political, and institutional discourse on Eurafrica, a future European community presupposed the transformation of the strictly national colonial projects into a joint European colonization of Africa. Strong evidence suggests that these ideas were instrumental in the actual diplomatic and political constitution of the EEC, or of Europe as a political subject, in 1957. The essay discusses why the EU’s colonial origins have been consigned to oblivion in mainstream research and why this history is of continued concern to the world.
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2.
  • Torbakov, Igor (author)
  • Neo-Ottomanism versus Neo-Eurasianism? : Nationalism and Symbolic Geography in Postimperial Turkey and Russia
  • 2017
  • In: Mediterranean Quarterly. - : Duke University Press. - 1047-4552 .- 1527-1935. ; 28:2, s. 125-145
  • Journal article (peer-reviewed)abstract
    • This essay investigates the ideational aspect of contemporary Turkey's identity politics and international conduct and compares these to Russia's. Over the past decade, several analysts have speculated that Russia and Turkey could form a strategic axis based on the shared vision of “Eurasia” and that there is similarity between Moscow's and Ankara's strategic outlooks: Russian neo-Eurasianism and Turkey's Kemalist Eurasianism. Yet the outlook that defines Ankara's understanding of Turkish national interest is not so much a permutation of Eurasianist ideas as it is a homegrown postimperial (and post-Kemalist) strategic vision, also known as neo-Ottomanism. Despite their philosophical affinity, neo-Eurasianism and neo-Ottomanism contain significant potential for confrontation.
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  • Result 1-2 of 2
Type of publication
journal article (2)
Type of content
peer-reviewed (2)
Author/Editor
Jonsson, Stefan, 196 ... (1)
Hansen, Peo, 1966- (1)
Torbakov, Igor (1)
University
Uppsala University (1)
Linköping University (1)
Language
English (2)
Research subject (UKÄ/SCB)
Social Sciences (2)
Humanities (1)

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