Russia & Eurasia Courses
Description
Fields of study are areas of specialization or concentration that are used to meet The Fletcher School’s depth requirement. MALD and MIB students need two fields of study to graduate, while MGA students need one field of study to graduate.
Courses on Russia, Europe, and Eurasia can be taken to fulfill the regional tier of the Comparative and Regional Studies concentration. The field consists of courses that either address broad themes using a comparative lens or delve deeply into a specific country or region. The field is multidisciplinary, with an emphasis on history and politics. Rather than operating at the level of the international system, the field focuses on the internal dynamics of states within particular regional and global contexts. MALD and MIB students can also petition for a self-designed field of study on the region advised by Professor Chris Miller.
The Fletcher School offers courses on Russia, Europe, and Eurasia that provide an understanding of foreign policy, geopolitics, religion, and security of a region torn apart after the collapse of the Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. Students will obtain knowledge about regional trends; social, political, and economic processes between and within the countries of the former Soviet Union; as well as their relations with the United States and the European Union. Current students, faculty, staff, and visiting scholars are welcome to access course syllabi and evaluations here using their Tufts University account. Students are encouraged to approach Arik Burakovsky for advice about designing their curriculum on the region.
Courses
Foreign policy is not immune from public debate, political gridlock, or human frailties. Building on The Art and Science of Statecraft, this course examines the political environment in which foreign policy is crafted and implemented. Topics include the role of public opinion, interest groups, bureaucracies, think tanks, and experts in the formulation of policy. Case studies of notable successes and failures of the policy process will be discussed. There will also be frequent in-class exercises in the various arts associated with the promotion of policy. Open to students who have completed D210.
In June 2023, the General Assembly of the Bureau of International Expositions – the body responsible for international exhibitions (also known as Expos or World’s Fairs) – chose Serbia as the host of the next Specialized Expo, which will take place in 2027. This course is an interdisciplinary practicum, in which students will hone their secondary and primary research skills to explore the opportunities and risks inherent in hosting Expo 2027 and produce a report with recommendations to the Government of Serbia on how to ensure that the development and execution of Expo deliver for Serbia and the Serbian people. Along the way, students will learn about Serbian politics, economy, and society; about Serbia’s international political and economic relations; about international rules, norms, and voluntary commitments related to infrastructure development, labor relations, environmental protection, human rights and fundamental freedoms; and about transparency and rule of law; among others. They will also improve their diplomatic writing skills and gain experience interviewing government and business officials and representatives of civil society to gather information and develop analytical skills. Access the course syllabi here.
An examination of the international relations of the United States and East Asia since the end of World War II, principally U.S. interactions with China, Japan, and Korea, and secondarily, with Vietnam and Southeast Asia. Focus on fundamental concepts and realities of international politics governing interactions between the U.S. and East Asian nations, as well as the major geopolitical issues of the day. Study of the continuing patterns of interaction among the U.S. and East Asian states—the dynamics of wars, ideologies, political, economic, and cultural issues. This course was taught in Fall 2018, Spring 2020, Spring 2021, Spring 2022 and Spring 2023 by Professor Sung-Yoon Lee. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
China’s rise is arguably the most important development of the 21st century and relations between the United States and China touch on every aspect of international affairs, from addressing climate change and responding to global pandemics to limiting the spread of nuclear weapons and promoting economic development. Relations between these two countries have the potential to touch every element of international affairs. In recent years, U.S.-China relations have become increasingly “securitized,” meaning that security considerations dominate. This course provides a survey of these relations today. While the course includes historical elements and considers how both China and the United States interact with the rest of the world, this course is strongly focused on contemporary security issues in the bilateral relationship. This course was taught in Fall 2023 by Professor David Logan. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
The course will explore the origins of transatlantic cooperation and the creation of common European economic and political structures, notably the European Union, and the development of transatlantic security alliances, particularly NATO. It will compare constitutional governance in the differing federal systems of the US and the EU, explore centrifugal forces like Brexit that are testing the sustainability of the EU, and examine the populist and nationalist political movements and neo-authoritarian tendencies that are challenging liberal democracy on both sides of the Atlantic. Areas of economic cooperation and tension will be studied, including the financial crisis, international trade and regulatory affairs, and the failed negotiation of a transatlantic trade and investment partnership. The course will also take up cooperative and conflicting policies of transatlantic partners in addressing security problems of terrorism, failed states, refugees and human rights catastrophes. Finally, it will examine the relationship of Russia, Turkey and countries to the east with evolving transatlantic security, economic and political structures. Mandatory for all MATA students. This course was taught in Fall 2017, Fall 2018, Fall 2019, Fall 2020, Fall 2021, Fall 2022, Fall 2023 and will be taught in Fall 2024 by Professor John Shattuck. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
This course will analyze the formation of current Russian foreign policy, with emphasis on influential actors such as security services, military, business elites, media figures, intellectuals, the Russian Orthodox Church, and close associates of President Vladimir Putin. It will explore the role of KGB veterans in shaping foreign policy decisions and the impact of the security services on the policymaking process. The course will also examine the influence of other groups on foreign policymaking and delve into key relationships with China, the Middle East, Europe, the US, and former Soviet countries. Russia’s full-scale invasion of Ukraine in 2022 became a watershed moment in the evolution of the Russian state and its relations with the outside world. The ongoing Russo-Ukrainian war has made irrelevant many approaches to analyzing Russian foreign policy that were popular before the February 2022 invasion. With this in mind, our course will provide a systematic review of the schools of thought on the sources and outcomes of Russia’s post-Cold War foreign policy. We will study key concepts, cases, and personalities to understand the impact of the main long-term drivers of Russian foreign policy: historical legacies, identity politics, leader worldviews, domestic governance, economy, bureaucratic processes, education, social mobility, and others. As we go through several key cases in the second part of the course, we will seek to understand the extent of continuity in Russian foreign policy goals and potential for their change. With the benefit of hindsight, we will assess the adequacy of the explanations and forecasts offered by top analysts before the onset of the full-scale Russo-Ukrainian war: which of them proved prescient and which of them missed the direction Russia was headed, and why? Finally, we will look to develop approaches to modeling the future of Russia’s place in the world and its foreign policy, depending on the key variables that we will work to identify. Active class participation and extensive reading are essential for success in the course. This course was taught in Fall 2017, Fall 2018, Spring 2020, Spring 2021, Spring 2022, and Spring 2023 by Professor Christopher Miller, and will be taught in Fall 2024 by Mikhail Troitskiy. Access the course syllabi, course video and evaluations here.
The seminar examines U.S.-European relations since a peaceful revolution brought down the Berlin Wall in November 1989. The seminar looks at various common challenges in the period thereafter and how they were dealt with, both from the U.S. and the European perspective: the unification of Germany, Bosnia, and Kosovo, the enlargement of NATO, NATO/Russia, 9/11, and the threat of violent extremism, Afghanistan, Iraq, Iran, and nuclear non-proliferation and disarmament, among others. The emphasis is on practical skills rather than theory. Students will practice to write short memos for political leaders and to give very short oral presentations. One-half credit. Watch the course overview here. This course was taught in Spring 2017, Spring 2018, Spring 2019, Spring 2020, Spring 2021, Spring 2022 and Spring 2023 by Professor Klaus Scharioth. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
In the 21st century, Europe finds itself between an introverted America and a resurgent Russia. This course will analyze European perceptions of Trump’s «America First» doctrine and its impact on policy changes in Europe. In this context, we will examine trade issues and policies as well as changes in the European dependence on the Atlantic security structure. PESCO, the European Defense Fund, and the European Army proposals will be discussed. On the other hand, we will discuss the security challenges posed by a resurgent and revisionist Russia. The new Russian assertiveness, as evidenced in Georgia, Ukraine, the Balkans, and Syria, and its interference in the domestic politics of Western democracies will be examined. This course was taught in Fall 2020 and Fall 2021 by Professor Constantine Arvanitopoulos. It is no longer being offered. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
Populist parties are on the rise in Europe. From SYRIZA in Greece, Podemos in Spain, and the Five Star movement in Italy, to Brexit and the entry of AFD to the German Parliament, Orban in Hungary, and Lepen in France, the increasing electoral support of populist parties is undoing the European political landscape. The objective of this course is to explore the phenomenon of populism. To provide definitions of populism, and examine current populist forces in Europe and their characteristics. It will also examine the ambivalent relationship between populism and democracy and assess national and international responses to the rise of populism. This seminar was taught in Spring 2020, Spring 2021, and Spring 2022 by Professor Constantine Arvanitopoulos. It is no longer being offered. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
This seminar is to give students an understanding on the “reverse waves” to democratic rule. In 1922, the coming to power of Mussolini in Italy marked the first «reverse wave» that by 1942 had reduced the number of democratic states. The triumph of the Allies in WWII and the consequent expansion of democratic rule were followed by a second “reverse wave” in the Soviet space, and dictatorships in Latin America, Southern Europe, and elsewhere. The triumph of liberal democracies in the Cold War is now threatened by a third «reverse wave» with the rise of illiberal democracies and the resuscitation of authoritarianism. This seminar will offer a broad taxonomy of authoritarian regimes in different times and will analyze the causes of this recurring phenomenon. This course was taught in Spring 2020, Spring 2021, and Spring 2022 by Professor Constantine Arvanitopoulos. It is no longer being offered. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
Through case studies, this course aims to give students the historical powers they need as they go out into the world: empathy, detachment, and relentless skepticism. The course examines the origins of World War I and the analogies the war provoked and provokes, as well as the two paradigms that come up when debating whether or not to go to war: the trouble that flowed from appeasing Nazi Germany and Japan in the run up to World War II, and the disastrous Sicilian expedition embarked on by ancient Athens. The tension between these paradigms is explored through studies of war in Korea, Vietnam, and Iraq. The course will also examine how different readings of history can lead to dramatically different policies; the U.S., Russia, and China tell Cold War history differently and those differences do much to explain their different world views. Armed with knowledge of the many endings of the Cold War, the course will also compare the revolutions in Europe in 1989, Ukraine’s Orange Revolution, and the Arab Spring. This course was taught in Spring 2017, Spring 2018, Spring 2019, Spring 2020, Fall 2021, Fall 2022, Fall 2023, and will be taught in Fall 2024 by Professor Sulmaan Khan. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
For decades, economic statecraft was viewed as the forgotten stepchild of foreign policy analysis. The use of force was the ne plus ultra of international relations; economic sanctions were viewed as a symbolic afterthought. Over the past three decades, however, the explosion of economic statecraft has required a rethink of this policy instrument. This course will offer a survey of analytical approaches to economic statecraft, as well as an assessment of prominent cases in economic history. It starts with a conceptual survey of what is under the umbrella of “economic statecraft,” with a special attention to sanctions in particular. The next section conducts a brief historical survey of sanctions, with a special emphasis on the cases that led to rethinks about the use of the policy option. The last section considers current practices on sanctions, in the United States and elsewhere, with an eye on what the future holds. This course was taught in Spring 2023 by Professor Daniel Drezner. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
Decolonization is one of the most significant historical phenomena of the modern world. The end of empires across the nineteenth and twentieth centuries gave way to the international system in which we live today: one constituted of politically independent nation-states. This course, drawing on historical methodologies, explores how decolonization was often a fraught, contested process that shaped not only the international system but also forms of nationhood and statehood, modes of political and social mobilization, and definitions of individual rights. Special attention is paid to the “Global South” as a crucial arena through which local, national, and international relations were forged, and we will further reflect on “decolonization” as the past versus “decolonization” as method. This course was taught in Fall 2023, and will be taught in Fall 2024 by Professor Elisabeth Leake. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
This course will examine major trends in Russian diplomacy and power projection. It begins by looking at Russian history, including the foreign policy of key tsars such as Peter the Great, Catherine the Great, and Alexander. Then the course turns to the 20th century, including the diplomacy of the early Soviet state, Stalin and World War II, the rise and fall of the Cold War, and post-Soviet Russia. This course was taught in Spring 2019, co-taught with Polina Beliakova in Fall 2021. It was also taught in Spring 2023 by Professor Christopher Miller. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
This course is a survey of China’s foreign relations from the Qing dynasty to the present. Topics include geography, warfare, diplomacy, trade, cultural exchange, and the connections between past and present. Lectures followed by discussion. This course was taught in Fall 2020, Fall 2021, Fall 2022, Fall 2023, and will be taught in Fall 2024 by Professor Sulmaan Khan. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
The seminar offers an in-depth analysis of selected nuclear issues that today top the U.S. nuclear agenda. The course seeks to explain the genesis and the evolution of these issues and to examine and debate the appropriateness of current policies. The course offers both theoretical and policy perspectives on these issues so as to encourage students to experiment with different theoretical lenses and to familiarize themselves with the constraints and limits of policy formulation in the face of complex and pressing dilemmas. This course was taught in Spring 2023 by Professor Francesca Giovannini. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
This is an elective in the International Security field. The course will also touch briefly on more general issues related to international politics, international organizations, and science and technology.
The course is divided into three parts. In the first part, consisting of weeks 1 to 4, we will acquire
foundational knowledge about the technology of nuclear weapons. This includes the fundamentals of nuclear physics, nuclear weapons design choices, the steps and infrastructure in the nuclear fuel cycle, the physical effects of nuclear weapons, and the technology of delivery systems, especially ballistic missiles. In the second part of the course, weeks 5 to 9, we will focus on the strategy and theory of nuclear weapons. This will include an examination of the drivers of nuclear proliferation and the policy tools of nonproliferation, the concept of strategic stability and the impact of technologies such as MIRVs and ballistic missile defense (BMD) systems, the relationship between nuclear weapons and interstate conflict, and the ethical and sociological dimensions of nuclear weapons, including the role that race, gender, nationalism, and religion can play. In the third part of the course, weeks 10 to 13, we will examine contemporary policy issues, with a particular focus on the United States. This includes questions of command and control, targeting policy, the adoption of a no-first-use policy, the impact of the strategic nuclear balance, the paths to nuclear escalation, and the role of future challenges which may disrupt the nuclear domain, including the effects of anthropogenic climate change, artificial intelligence, and the possibilities of permanent nuclear disarmament.
This course will be taught in Fall 2024 by Professor David Logan. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
As a domain and instrument of competition and conflict, cyber space enables a range of global actors—including dissidents, terrorist organizations, and states with varying levels of offensive and defensive cyber capabilities—to assert influence, project power, and conduct activities in the increasingly ambiguous areas between war and peace. This course will explore the role of cyberspace in international conflict, including through the use of espionage, disinformation campaigns, and attacks; the course will examine the policies, strategies, and governance structures of key actors that operate within the cyber domain. We will also study why the development of international norms in cyberspace has proved so elusive. This course was taught in Spring 2023 by Professor Susan Landau. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
This course will address “science diplomacy” as an international, interdisciplinary, and inclusive (holistic) field with global relevance to promote cooperation and prevent conflict among nations in our world that is being transformed with advanced technologies. The first formal dialogue between North Atlantic Treaty Organization (NATO) and Russia about security issues in the Arctic Ocean will be used as a case study. The course addresses the elements of science diplomacy that apply across our civilization: (1) understanding of changes over time and space; (2) instruments for Earth system monitoring and assessment; (3) early warning systems; (4) catalysts of public-policy agendas; (5) features of international legal institutions; (6) sources of invention and commercial enterprise; (7) continuity across generations; (8) and global tool of diplomacy. The overall objective of this course is to consider the contributions of science diplomacy for building common interests among nations so that we can balance economic prosperity, environmental protection, and societal well-being – in view of today’s urgencies and the needs of future generations – across our world. This course was taught in Spring 2017, Spring 2018, Spring 2019, and Spring 2020 by Professor Paul Berkman. It is no longer being offered. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
This seminar examines the significance of China’s frontiers for Chinese foreign policy, Asian security, and international relations. The course will move geographically, taking students from Vietnam to the South China Sea, by way of the Tibetan plateau, Central Asia, the Mongolian steppe, and the Diaoyu (or Senkaku) islands, to name a few. Students will consider the different forces that come into play in a frontier region, such as ethnicity, trade, boundary disputes, and geography. The course is multidisciplinary: students are encouraged to take advantage of perspectives from history, anthropology, political science, economics, and journalism. Students are expected to produce a 15-30 page research paper. The assignments of an annotated bibliography, a précis, and a rough draft are meant to facilitate the writing process. This course was taught in Spring 2019 and Spring 2020 by Professor Sulmaan Khan. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
An examination of Korea’s modern “evolution” as a state and society. Emphasis on Korea’s modern political history, from the origins and theory of statecraft in traditional Korea to the major geopolitical issues of the present day. Topics include Korea’s relations with the great powers of the North Pacific and the primacy of international relations in the Korean world: from imperialism and Japanese colonialism, partition of the Korean peninsula and the establishment of two separate Koreas, Cold War politics and the Korean War, economic development and political freedom, to inter-Korean relations. This course was taught in Fall 2020, Fall 2021, and Fall 2022 by Professor Sung-Yoon Lee. It is no longer being offered. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
North Korea is the world world’s last major hermit society. Since the division of the Korean peninsula in 1945, South Korea has developed into one of the largest trading nations in the world with a vibrant democratic polity, while North Korea has descended into a perpetually aid-dependent state that maintains domestic control through the deification of the ruling family and operation of extensive political prisoner concentration camps. What does the future hold for North Korea? Emphasis on the Kim family continuum, strategy of brinkmanship, human rights, nuclear politics, and the implications of regime preservation or collapse. This course was taught in Spring 2020, Spring 2021, Spring 2022, and Spring 2023 by Professor Sung-Yoon Lee. It is no longer being offered. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
This course offers a general introduction to nuclear security. It provides a comprehensive but concise overview of the topic’s main historical, theoretical, and policy dimensions. During the first part of the semester, we will discuss key concepts (fission, deterrence, vertical proliferation, etc.) associated with the post-World War II emergence of nuclear strategy, explore the superpowers’ Cold War competition, and study the emergence of new nuclear-weapon states (Britain, China, etc.). Once these conceptual and historical foundations in place, we will investigate the theoretical debates that have divided scholars on seminal questions such as the causes of proliferation, the effectiveness of the international non-proliferation regime (and of counter-proliferation), the impact of nuclear weapons on state behavior (war/peace, coercion, etc.), and the many constraints and forms of resistance that have emerged over time (norms, disarmament, etc.). During the third section of the course, we will examine the post-Cold War emergence of the “second nuclear age,” with a specific interest for nuclear terrorism, climate change, nuclear safety, and US primacy. Finally, we will probe the nuclear challenges that have (re)emerged in East Asia (China, North Korea), the Middle East (Israel, Iran), Europe (Russia’s nuclear resurgence, NATO’s extended deterrence), and South Asia (India, Pakistan). In each class meeting, we will cover these local nuclear powers’ historical emergence, their current status, and the US response. The conclusion of the course will survey the latest trends, including prospects for disarmament, the Trump Administration’s nuclear policy, and the impact of cyber on command-and-control systems. Watch the course overview here. This course was taught in Spring 2021 by Professor Thomas Cavanna. It is no longer being offered. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
This course explores the intersection of geography, religion, and security in the trans-regional, trans-continental space of Eurasia. The course focuses primarily on the relationship between the United States and Russia, and questions whether the US and Russia are engaged in a zero-sum competition in Eurasia. The course has three parts: an introduction to theories of classical and critical geopolitics; an introduction to the origins of Eurasia as a geographic and cultural space, where religion figures prominently in competing geographies of power and identity; and, a review of key cases that give comparative purchased into the religion-security nexus in Eurasia. This course was taught in Spring 2017, Spring 2018, Spring 2019, Spring 2020, and Spring 2022 by Professor Elizabeth Prodromou. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
Has the European Union (EU) delivered on its promise of a fully integrated economic and political union? How has Europe grown from its modest beginning with the European Coal and Steel Community established in 1951 with only six countries to the European Union, which today encompasses 27 countries? Is the Euro crisis undermining the future of the European Union or will it usher the EU in a fiscal union, which by necessity requires a closer political union? How does this multi-faceted integrative process shape the European business environment? Through class discussion and case studies managerial implications for firms operating in Europe are assessed at the provincial, national, and EU level. No prerequisite. Offered in English (01) and French (02) language sections. For MIB students, this course is one of the regional options. This course was taught in Spring 2020 and Spring 2022 by Professor Laurent Jacque. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.
Power is the defining concept in the international relations discipline, and yet there is no consensus about what that concept means. This is a problematic state of affairs. The need for a better conceptual and empirical understanding of power should be obvious. This seminar will confront these conceptual and empirical problems head-on. Through an array of scholarly readings and case studies, we will aim for a better understanding of what power means, its myriad dimensions, how it is perceived over time, and how it is exercised by actors in world politics. This course was taught in Spring 2018, Spring 2020, Fall 2021, Fall 2022 and Fall 2023 by Professor Daniel Drezner. Access the course syllabi and evaluations here.