2014
DOI: 10.1080/15705854.2014.965893
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The Partnership for Modernisation: Contradictions of the Russian Modernisation Agenda

Abstract: The Partnership for Modernisation was an attempt to re-set the EU-Russia relationship. This article discusses how far modernisation can be the basis for a more productive relationship. The article argues that rather than a shared approach with the EU there is a particular, historical Russian approach to modernisation. It discusses how far this constitutes a separate model and identifies a range of problems such as corruption and human rights which undermine this model even in its own terms. The article suggest… Show more

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Cited by 6 publications
(4 citation statements)
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“…Past agreements such as the PCA failed primarily because of an asymmetry of interests between the two. The EU's main interest was, and still is to some extent, in promoting democracy and open markets, while Russia's main interest is regaining its status as a great power, the key to this being restoring the power of the Russian economy (Flenley, 2015). The P4M differs from the PCA in the sense that it aims to promote alignment of technical regulations and standards, ensure proper functioning of the judiciary in the fight against corruption, and foster economic participation of individuals and businesses (Flenley, 2015).…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
See 1 more Smart Citation
“…Past agreements such as the PCA failed primarily because of an asymmetry of interests between the two. The EU's main interest was, and still is to some extent, in promoting democracy and open markets, while Russia's main interest is regaining its status as a great power, the key to this being restoring the power of the Russian economy (Flenley, 2015). The P4M differs from the PCA in the sense that it aims to promote alignment of technical regulations and standards, ensure proper functioning of the judiciary in the fight against corruption, and foster economic participation of individuals and businesses (Flenley, 2015).…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…The EU's main interest was, and still is to some extent, in promoting democracy and open markets, while Russia's main interest is regaining its status as a great power, the key to this being restoring the power of the Russian economy (Flenley, 2015). The P4M differs from the PCA in the sense that it aims to promote alignment of technical regulations and standards, ensure proper functioning of the judiciary in the fight against corruption, and foster economic participation of individuals and businesses (Flenley, 2015). The motivation for the EU remains that democratic norms can be transferred indirectly and effectively through economic and politically neutral relationships, as more direct attempts, such as the PCA, were unsuccessful.…”
Section: Review Of the Literaturementioning
confidence: 99%
“…Although the idea of modernisation was a shared objective, it has been interpreted in different ways in Russia and in the EU (Flenley 2014). In most items of the modernisation partnership, the EU has been the demander and Russia the reluctant partner.…”
Section: The Visa-free Regime As a Key To Russian Modernisation?mentioning
confidence: 99%
“…On the other hand, others view it as a positionist anthropocentric ideology with a focus on the future (Chebankova 2016). While conservatism is successfully used in Russian populist ideologies to push forward certain legal initiatives, especially in the social domain, such as anti-LGBTQI laws or restrictive migration policies (Makarychev & Yatsyk 2015), it has limited application in economics, although the label 'conservative modernisation' has been used to describe Russian economic development (Flenley 2015;Rousseau 2016).…”
Section: Conservatism á La Russian: Law and Politicsmentioning
confidence: 99%