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SOUTH STREAM: EUROPEAN NATION STATE BUILDING IN THE PUTIN AND POST-PUTIN ERA

Benedict E. DeDominicis

Review of Business and Finance Studies, 2016, vol. 7, issue 2, 51-70

Abstract: Bulgarian nationalism as a political force for state political reform faces formidable challenges due to the Bulgarian state’s dependent development under Communism. Nationalist communism was a comparatively effective component of the legitimation strategy for the Communist regime. In neighboring Serbia, the Titoist regime suppressed ethnic nationalism. As the largest nationalist challenge to the Communist Yugoslav state, the Serb national community was partitioned. One-third of ethnic Serbs were placed outside of the Serb republic, and Kosovo and Vojvodina were officially subunits of Serbia but were Yugoslav federal constituent republics in all but name. Russian exploitation of opportunities for influence expansion in Serbia and Bulgaria exist but differ, reflecting this conflicting legacy of Communism in both states. Serb rejection of Communism included advocacy of Serb irredentism, which the post-Soviet/Russian nationalist regime under Vladimir Putin seeks to exploit. Bulgarian nationalist Communism associated itself closely with the USSR until the rise of Mikhail Gorbachev and his reforms in the USSR in the mid-1980s. Bulgarian militant nationalism lacks societal consensus on the basic principles that constitute it. NATO-Russian competition for influence implies European Union deepening and widening occurs in opposition to postSoviet Russian state influence. Europeanization implies reducing Russian bargaining leverage within the Bulgarian polity.

Keywords: Bulgaria; European Union; Russia; Serbia; South Stream (search for similar items in EconPapers)
JEL-codes: F5 K4 P3 Y8 (search for similar items in EconPapers)
Date: 2016
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