Religion and Soft Power in the South Caucasus: An Introduction
Part I: The Case of Georgia
Chapter 1: Turkish Soft Power Politics in Georgia: Making Sense of Political and Cultural Implications
Chapter 2: Common Faith in Scrutiny: Orthodoxy as Soft Power in Russia-Georgia Relations
Chapter 3: Iran’s Soft Power Policy in Georgia
Part II: The Case of Azerbaijan
Chapter 4: Iranian Soft Power in Azerbaijan—Does Religion Matter?
Chapter 5: Examining Salafism in Azerbaijan: Transnational Connections and Local Context
Chapter 6: Islam and Turkey’s Soft Power in Azerbaijan: the Gülen Movement
Part III: The Case of Armenia
Chapter 7: Religion as a Factor in Kurdish Identity Discourse in Armenia and Turkey
Chapter 8: Iran’s Soft Power Policy in Armenia: Cultural Diplomacy and Religion
Part IV: The EU – Russia Framework
Chapter 9: Face to Face with Conservative Religious Values: Assessing the EU’s Normative Impact in the South Caucasus
Chapter 10: Russia as a Counter-Normative Soft Power: Between Ideology and Policy
Part V: Prospects
Chapter 11: Prospects for Thinking Soft Power beyond Joseph Nye
Ansgar Jödicke is a senior lecturer in the Department of Social Sciences, University of Fribourg, Switzerland. His areas of research are religion and politics, in particular political religious education (politics) in Europe and the relationship between religion and politics in the South Caucasus. Together with Alexander Agadjanian and Evert van der Zweerde, he recently edited the volume Religion, Nation and Democracy in the South Caucasus (2015). Ansgar Jödicke has coordinated several research projects in the South Caucasus and in Switzerland. Among them, the SCOPES project ‘Religion and Soft Power. Religious Communities in the South Caucasus as Objects of External Influences’ (2014–2017) led to the results published in this volume.
"This book makes two very valuable contributions. It uses South
Caucasus as a rich deposit of case studies to look at the very
popular issue of soft power from an unusual angle of religion; but
it also proposes a fresh view for those who are interested in this
small but very complex region and are tired of looking at it
through lenses of ethnic conflict, geopolitical competition, and
oil and gas politics. Lots of interesting things to be found in
this collection." - Ghia Nodia, Professor of Politics, Ilia State
University in Tbilisi, Georgia."A fascinating collection, this
volume helps us understand the vastly different political
trajectories taken by the three South Caucasian states since
independence. Written with theoretical sophistication, it adds
important insights into how soft power is conceived and used by the
South Caucasian governments, by their regional neighbors (Iran,
Turkey and Russia primarily), and by the religious organizations
themselves. The theoretical contributions are enriched by the
chapters’ combined focus on particular case studies as well as on
the broader framework of bilateral and multilateral relationships
in the region. This is an intelligent book written by scholars who
understand the complexities of the South Caucasus, and an important
contribution to the field, helping to explain why religion remains
such a vital part of modern political life." - Stephen F. Jones,
Professor of Russian and Eurasian Politics, Mount Holyoke
College."The reader who wants to learn something definite about
religion and, soft power, or the South Caucasus is well advised to
start making explicit her or his own conceptions of all three -
otherwise she or he may get lost in the wealth of information that
this book contains."
Evert van der Zweerde (Nijmegen)
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