Network Plus Shifting Global Polarities: Russia, China, and Eurasia in Transition

Project overview

We are witnessing a period of major shifts on the Eurasian continent, upending conventional wisdom, and ushering in an era of unprecedented threats from multiple regions and actors. Long standing conflicts across Europe and Asia have gathered momentum, be it Russia's invasion of Ukraine, the intensification of the Nagorno-Karabakh territorial dispute, growing instability in the Balkans, or the regional and extra-regional consequences of the growth of China's military, economic, and political power.

These destabilising trends interact unpredictably with the new realities of climate change and the intensification of human impacts on the environment, with the rise of populism in certain Eastern European states, and the enormous potential of new forms of technology, or the shifting migratory and export movement of people, animals, and products. Consequently, increasing numbers of people across these regions live under undemocratic regimes, shattering civil societies, deepening economic insecurity, and intensifying vulnerability to natural disasters. This is unquestionably a time of massive uncertainty.

Led by the University of Birmingham, this Network Plus involves OSGA. It brings together more than 30 academics, policymakers, and artists from leading centres of excellence, expertise, and training (7 UK and 6 Overseas) to comprehend, evaluate and address the challenges evident across a region encompassing Russia, China, Eastern Europe, the Balkans, and Central and Eastern Asia. It will create new syntheses, knowledge and networks, build new capacities, and train and mentor early career academics and policymakers.

The Network combines the social sciences, arts and humanities and physical sciences, while building on existing good practice in multi-disciplinary Area Studies, to develop novel inter-disciplinary alliances and explore urgent challenges such as climate change and energy, rare earths extraction, and cybersecurity in addition to longstanding areas of concerns such as migration flows and economic links and dependencies.

UK partners: University of Birmingham; University of Manchester; University of Oxford, together with the Institute of Development Studies and the Royal United Services Institute.

International Partners: Colgate University [United States]; the Ukrainian Catholic University; OSCE Academy Bishkek [Kyrgyzstan].

Project details

Start date: 01 March 2024

End date: 01 March 2028

Funder: ESRC

Scheme: Networking Plus

Principal Investigator: Professor Jonathan Oldfield (University of Birmingham)

Oxford Co-Investigator: Professor Paul Chaisty

Website: Network Plus Shifting Global Polarities