Colloquy Downeast Blue Hill Maine

Colloquy Downeast

Spirited Conversations in Great Company

FacilitatorCourtenay Haight
Date & TimeFebruary 26, March 4, 11, 18 (Fridays)
10:00am - 12:00pm
LocationHoward Room, Blue Hill Public Library

What is the historical and political basis of why Russia and its leadership is presently acting on the world stage as it is? Can a look at post-Soviet era Russia and its leadership in the 1980s and ’90s help explain the popularity of a leader such as Putin within his own country? There is debate about what should be our reaction to present Russian aggression. Should the West re-impose a policy of sustained “containment” as was the case with the Soviet Union OR should we adopt a more “liberal” view which acknowledges Russia’s “sphere of influence” vis-à-vis its neighbors.

Courtenay Haight is a retired banker, a farmer and a pan player.

  ▼ Syllabus

Syllabus


This colloquy will be divided into two segments:

  1. The historical and political basis of why Russia and its leadership is presently acting on the world stage as it is.

    A brief review of post-Soviet era Russia and its leadership in the 1980s and 1990s might help explain the popularity of a leader such as Putin within his own country.

  2. What should be the West’s reaction to present Russian aggression in the Ukraine and elsewhere both presently and into the future?

    There is a debate about what our reaction should be—those suggesting a re-imposition of the policy of sustained “containment” which dominated the West’s policy toward the Soviet Union for many years prior to the collapse of the Soviet state versus those suggesting a more “liberal” view which acknowledges Russia’s “sphere of influence” vis-à-vis its neighbors. This latter view also acknowledges that sustained NATO expansion ever closer to Russia’s borders has taken place, despite assurances that this expansion would not happen.


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  ▼ Reading Materials

Reading Materials


As we discuss modern-day Russia, our discussion will be enhanced to the extent that you read some or all of the following recommended materials:

  • The Man without a Face, Masha Gessen, Riverhead, 2013 [Amazon][MaineCat]
  • Putin’s Russia, Life in a Failing Democracy, Anna Politkovskaia, Henry Holt Company, 2007 [Amazon][MaineCat]
  • The Russian Moment in World History, Marshall T. Poe, Princeton University Press, 2003 [Amazon][MaineCat]
  • Armageddon Averted. Stephen Kotkin, Oxford Univ. Press, 2008 [Amazon][MaineCat]
  • The Limits of Partnership, Angela E. Stent, Princeton Univ. Press 2014 [Amazon][BHPL][MaineCat]

In addition, the following articles from Foreign Affairs magazine (available at the Blue Hill Public Library) will help fuel the discussion:

Sep/Oct 2014

  • pp 87 ff, by John Mearsheimer
  • pp 90 ff, by Mary Elise Sarotte

Nov/Dec 2014

  • pp 167ff, by Michael McFaul, et al.

Jan/Feb 2015

  • pp 96ff, by Matthias Matthijs & G.F. Treverton
  • pp 108ff, by Hans Kundnani
  • pp 150ff, by Sarah E. Mendelson-a book review

May/Jun 2015

  • pp 48ff, by Ivan Krastev & Mark Leonard


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  ▼ Registration

Registration

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