Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation

Organization of the Black Sea Economic Cooperation
Author: Engin SABANCI
Publisher: Engin Sabancı
Total Pages: 306
Release: 2013-05-02
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1301864064

Countries in the Black Sea Basin established BSEC seeking a region-wide solution to their common problems with a sense of political and economic belonging to the Black Sea. Member states joined the cooperation without considering settling their problems and demands in a satisfying manner. They were quite pleased with the idea to balance their interests instead of settling their security concerns.

The Black Sea Region

The Black Sea Region
Author: Oleksandr Pavliuk
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 318
Release: 2016-07-08
Genre: Business & Economics
ISBN: 1315498235

The ring of countries bordering the Black Sea make up one of the unstable subregions of former Soviet republics, satellites and neighbours. This volume analyses the security issues in the Black Sea region and the development of mechanisms that would promote cooperation and conflict management.

The Dynamics of Black Sea Subregionalism

The Dynamics of Black Sea Subregionalism
Author: Panagiota Manoli
Publisher: Routledge
Total Pages: 296
Release: 2016-03-23
Genre: Political Science
ISBN: 1317035135

Conflict and cooperation are two dynamics that have shaped the political economy and international relations around the Black Sea since the early nineties. Despite the negative structural environment and the persistence of a high security dilemma, cooperative efforts among Black Sea actors (primarily state elites but increasingly non-state actors) have been advancing, even though slowly. Representing a new development in the study of contemporary regionalism, Panagiota Manoli examines the process of institutionalized subregional cooperation and casts new light on the factors influencing the reconfiguration of subregional structures in the region. Focusing on the primary initiative in the region, Black Sea Economic Cooperation (BSEC), Manoli traces how subregionalism has evolved since the early nineties and what has been driving and conditioning this process. Questioning whether there is a definitive nature to subregionalism, Manoli then discusses Black Sea subregionalism within the European integration process, examining the impact of the European Union. Contributing to the conceptualization of the subregional phenomenon, this book should be read by scholars and policy-makers alike unclear on how local elements interface with extra-regional forces in the shaping of a subregion.

Black Sea Economic Cooperation Pact (BSEC).

Black Sea Economic Cooperation Pact (BSEC).
Author:
Publisher:
Total Pages:
Release:
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ISBN:

Presents the Black Sea Economic Cooperation Pact (BSEC), a regional organization whose members include Russia, Ukraine, Turkey, Georgia, Romania, Bulgaria, Albania, Armenia, Azerbaijan, Moldova, and Greece. Discusses economic cooperation initiatives of the BSEC. Information is presented online by Photius Coutsoukis.

The EU's New Black Sea Policy

The EU's New Black Sea Policy
Author: Michael Emerson
Publisher: CEPS
Total Pages: 18
Release: 2008
Genre: European Union countries
ISBN: 9290798033

After the accession of Bulgaria and Romania in 2007, the European Union moved quickly to fill an obvious gap in its vision of the regions to its periphery, proposing the 'Black Sea Synergy'. The EU shows a certain degree of commonality in its approaches to the Baltic Sea region, the Mediterranean and now the Black Sea. While the political profiles of these maritime regions are very different, they naturally give rise to many common policy challenges. This paper sets out a 'typology of regionalisms' and examines where the EU's Black Sea Synergy is going to find its place. There is already evidence of a diplomatic ballet between the EU and Russia, with the EU countering Russia's pursuit of its own 'geopolitical regionalism'. The EU would like in theory to see its efforts lead to a 'transformative regionalism', but the lack of agreement so far over further extending membership perspectives to countries of the region risks the outcome being placed more in the category of 'compensatory regionalism'