Thirty Years On: Is There Still a Post-Soviet Space?
15 November 2021 6:30 pm CET
Public panel discussion on the prospects for future relations between the EU and its neighbours to the East
Venue
Hybrid event: Sky Lounge, Oskar-Morgenstern-Platz 1, Vienna + facebook stream
Description
How did the dissolution of the USSR impact the European Community, and later the EU? The Baltic states joined the EU but for the rest of Eastern Europe only the Eastern Partnership framework was put on offer, with perspectives of deeper economic and political cooperation but without clear membership prospects. Relations between the EU and Russia have been quite intense over the last thirty years. Despite multiple political crises and disagreements, economic cooperation, business ties and people-to-people contacts have abounded. The EU and Russian influences in the Eastern Neighborhood overlapped and sometimes clashed, but otherwise co-existed relatively peacefully up until the events in Ukraine in 2013. After Maidan protests and especially the annexation of Crimea, the geopolitical situation on the continent has changed irreversibly. Further crises unfolded, including the war in Eastern Ukraine.
More recently, Russia-EU relations have reached a new low, with Moscow dismissing relations with Brussels as inessential and focusing on bilateral ties with EU member states, the internal political crisis in Belarus spilled over the border and gained a geopolitical dimension, the full-scale war between Armenia and Azerbaijan brought victory to Baku and enhanced Turkish standing in the region, while Moldova elected a pro-European party in a landslide. Do these drastic developments point to an emergence of a new geopolitical situation on the European continent? How should the EU, Russia and the Eastern Neighborhood countries build relations with one another in order to manage this transition without major conflicts and human losses?
The panel will discuss the impact of the dissolution of the Soviet Union on European security and how the latter has changed after thirty years. It will look at the EU’s relations with Russia and Eastern Neighborhood countries, discuss the role of the Baltic states in formulating the EU policy towards Eastern Partners and Russia, and assess how states’ relations on the European continent might evolve in the near future.
The event is organised by the International Institute for Peace, in cooperation with Konrad-Adenauer-Stiftung Multilateral Dialogue Vienna, the Institute for the Danube Region and Central Europe (IDM), the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies (wiiw), and with the support of the Diplomatic Academy in Vienna cordially invite you to the public panel on the following topic:
Panel
Keynote Speech:
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PHILIPP THER, Professor of Central European History at the University of Vienna
Speaker:
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VASILY ASTROV, Economist at the Vienna Institute for International Economic Studies
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TINATIN KHIDASHELI, Chair of Civic IDEA, former Georgian Defense Minister
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KRISTI RAIK (online), Director of the Estonian Foreign Policy Institute at the ICDS
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TATIANA ROMANOVA, Associate Professor at St. Petersburg State University, Russia
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SEBASTIAN SCHÄFFER, Managing Director at the Institute for Danube Region and Central Europe
Moderation:
- HANNES SWOBODA, President of the IIP and former MEP
Registration & Covid
Please register here: https://www.iipvienna.com/event-calendar/jcpoa1-ywb9b-ft35t-n8hsf
Registration for the event is absolutely necessary. The number of seats is limited. The 2G rule applies (recovered or vaccinated)!
By participating in this event, you agree that any photos or recordings taken that include footage of your person may be published or used in any other way by the organizers of the event.
Online streeming
The event will be streamed via www.facebook.com/IIPVIENNA