Turkey is now a leading partner for many states within Central Asia. Sharing a common cultural inheritance, Ankara has been ...
The Summer 2018 issue of New Eastern Europe tackles the complexity of para-states in the post-Soviet space.
Estonia’s current political climate is now in a state of flux. While the traditionally largest parties face difficulties ...
The recent elections in the Czech Republic are likely to result in key changes in the country’s outlook. A turn away from ...
Aleksandar Vučić has for many years been trying to balance between East and West, maintaining close ties with Russia, cultivating good relations with the United States, and simultaneously striving for ...
Peace in Ukraine will not come while one side still believes it can win on the battlefield. Supplying Ukraine with Tomahawk missiles is not an escalation, but a way to balance the fight and bring real ...
In November, Serbia marks one year since the Novi Sad railway station canopy collapse, and the subsequent student protests sparked by it. Today, despite growing international attention, concerns over ...
ANDRZEJ KOZŁOWSKI: How is Russia exploiting far-right organizations in Europe? KACPER RĘKAWEK: This process began over ten years ago and specifically after the 2012 protests in Moscow, when Russians ...
Bulgaria, since both its ancient and modern beginnings, has been invariably a multiethnic, mainly Slavic and Turkic, polity. School textbooks in Bulgaria lavish much attention on the ancient Bulgars, ...
Issue 6/2018: 1918. The year of independence In the eastern parts of the European continent, 1918 is remembered not only as the end of the First World War, but also saw the emergence of ...
Poland has proven to be one of Ukraine’s most steadfast allies in recent years and especially since Russia’s invasion in February. Despite this, the two countries have not always been so close.