This volume is an analysis of the evolution of geopolitical and economic integration in the Eurasian Region. The integration of Euro-Asia is an increasing phenomenon, and a large-scale analysis is necessary to avoid simple judgment based solely on geopolitical approaches. The editor of this publication has various integration such as geopolitical and constitutional aspects, relations with the EU, immigration problems, energy flow, compatibility of Eurasian law with WTO law, and comparison with European integrated models Present the profile. The book presents extensive prospects through expert papers from Russia, Ukraine, Lithuania, Belarus, Italy and France.
This book is interesting to scholars and practitioners in the fields of constitution, international and European law, international relations and political science. It has been published with the support of the Faculty of International Studies at the University of Milan and certain interdisciplinary research groups on Central and Eastern European countries, known at the national and international level, have integrated that experience for many years.
The Eurasian economic alliance must negotiate as a whole to sign a free trade agreement with another country. The main players of the Eurasian Economic Union are the European Union, Turkey, Iran, China, the Korean Peninsula. The EEU aims to increase trade with partners in the Middle East and East Asia to benefit from the growing trade between Europe and Asia. The tension with the EU in 2014 increased the number of unions and made post-Soviet countries join unions. Both sides condemn each other by sculpturing the scope of influence. Trade unionists, especially Russia, are trying to diversify their trade by signing economic treaties with China, Iran and Turkey. Trade between the Democratic People's Republic of Korea and Korea is also increasing
Both the European Union (EU) and the Eurasian Economic Union (EU) have proposed that Moldova, Ukraine and Georgia join unions. On March 21, 2014, all three countries selected the EU and signed an agreement. However, the detached areas of Moldova (Transcendistrian River), Ukraine (Donetsk and Luhansk), Georgia (South Ossetia and Abkhazia) join the Eurasian Customs Union and expressed a willingness to integrate in Europe and Asia. Economic union In August 2013 Ukraine applied for participation in the Eurasian Economic Coalition as an observer of the European Economic Union. Victor Yanukovych decided to abandon the agreement with the EU and is seeking integration with EAEU, in particular the last important element of Euromaidan's protest. President Ukraine and leading the Crimean crisis
In discussing the Eurasian economic alliance, President Vladimir Putin said the Eurasian economic alliance more closely coordinates economic and monetary policy, including the use of the future common currency. The Eurasian Economic Union Convention does not assume the establishment of a monetary union, but Russian Prime Minister Medvedev sought the introduction of a common currency for the Eurasian Economic Union. Leonid Slutsky, the chairman of the State Dumas CIS Committee, supported the discussion on the establishment of a currency alliance in Medvedev. Slutsky said that it might be started shortly after 2015 when the structure of the union becomes apparent. Belarusian President Alexander Lukashenko has launched the idea of creating a "new euro" for the Eurasian economic group. In April 2014 we resumed the discussion on the introduction of a single currency