Role theory and Russia’s attempts to integrate the post-Soviet space: from internal to international duties
- Institution: Cracow University of Economics
- ORCID: https://orcid.org/0000-0001-8653-3892
- Year of publication: 2022
- Source: Show
- Pages: 72-100
- DOI Address: https://doi.org/10.15804/npw20223504
- PDF: npw/35/npw3504.pdf
Role theory and Russia’s attempts to integrate the post-Soviet space: from internal to international duties
With the Russian invasion of Ukraine in February 2022, Moscow’s foreign policy towards the post-Soviet space has become an even greater area of concern. In order to better understand Russia’s behaviour in the post-Soviet space, it is worth analysing what led to Moscow’s renewed interest in this area. There are numerous accounts explaining Russia’s policies towards its neighbourhood, but they often focus on material factors or Russian imperial complexes. To address the existing gap and examine changes in Moscow’s attitude towards the region, this paper will use role theory and analyse shifts in Russia’s national role conceptions. It argues that the combination of important external and internal factors led to changes in perception of Russia’s international duties and responsibilities between Putin’s rise to power and his return to the presidency in 2012. Consequently, these changes resulted in different understanding of Russia’s role in the post-Soviet space, which had implications for Russia’s increasingly aggressive actions in the region afterwards.