Dr. Robert M. Cutler
0. Contents
1. Current Appointment (p 1) 6. Research Accomplishments (p 5)
2. Education and Training (p 1) 7. Research Presentations (p 8)
3. Chronology of Appointments (p 1) 8. Professional, Institutional and Public Service (p 20)
4.
Selected Public Service
Activities 9. Languages and International Experience (p 21)
and Professional Honours (p 2) 10. References (p 22)
5. Teaching Experience (p 3) 11. Publications (p 22)
1. Current Appointment
Research Fellow, Institute of European, Russian and Eurasian Studies, Carleton University
Postal address: c/o 4148A Ste-Catherine St. West, Suite 416, Westmount, Qc. H3Z 0A2, Canada
Tel.: (+1 514) 939−2769 Fax: (+1 514) 932−4457
Email: rmc@alum.mit.edu Website: http://www.robertcutler.org
http://www.linkedin.com/in/RobertMCutler http://carleton-ca.academia.edu./RobertMCutler
2. Education and Training
Columbia University: McLaine Leadership Fellow, Rockefeller Brothers Program for East Central Europe and the Former Soviet Union, International House, 1993–1994.
Social Science Research Council: Post-doctoral Central Asian Training Grant, Summer 1993.
Social Science Research Council and American Council of Learned Societies: Post-doctoral Fellow in Russian and Soviet Studies, 1985–1988.
Columbia University: Mellon Post-doctoral Fellow, W. Averell Harriman Institute for the Advanced Study of the Soviet Union, School of International and Public Affairs, 1983–1984.
Moscow University: IREX Post-doctoral Fellow, Faculty of Contemporary History, 1982–1983.
University of Michigan: Ph.D., Political Science, 1982.
University of Geneva: Albert Gallatin Fellow in International Affairs, Faculty of International History and Politics, Graduate Institute of International Studies, 1979–1980.
Pennsylvania State University: M.A., Political Science, 1976.
Massachusetts Institute of Technology: Sc.B., Political Science; and Sc.B., Humanities and Science (History and Literature), 1974.
3. Chronology of Appointments
3.1. Principal Research and Teaching Appointments
Carleton University: Research Associate, Institute of European, Russian and Eurasian Studies [and its antecedent academic units], 1996–Present.
Université Laval: Professeur adjoint, 1988–1996.
University of California at Santa Barbara: Visiting Assistant Professor, 1985–1988.
University of Arizona: Visiting Assistant Professor, 1984–1985.
Webster University at Geneva: Visiting Professor, Summer 1983.
3.2. Other Research Appointments
Non-Resident Fellow, Institute for Near East and Gulf Military Analysis, Dubai, 2011–Present.
Member, Research Program Energy Program Asia, International Institute for Asian Studies, Leiden University, 2005–Present.
McGill University: Member, Research Group in International Security, 2009–2010; Member, Research Group on Ethnic Conflict, 2008–2010.
Research Fellow, Institute for the Study of Coherence and Emergence, Boston, 2000–2011.
Regional Expert, Central Eurasia Project, Open Society Institute, Soros Foundation, 1999–2001.
Columbia University: Visiting Scholar, Institute on East Central Europe, 1993–1994; Visiting Scholar, The Harriman Institute,, 1991–1993.
Member, East–South Project, Department of Government, University of Maryland, 1989–1991.
Research Associate, Centre québécois de relations internationales, Université Laval, 1988–1996.
Research Associate, Slavic Studies Center, University of Pennsylvania, Autumn 1987.
Research Associate, Center for International and Strategic Affairs, University of California at Los Angeles, 1986–1987.
Research Associate, Summer Research Laboratory, Russian and East European Center, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Summers 1986, 1987.
4. Selected Public Service Activities and Professional Honours
Montreal Press Club: Member, Executive Board, 2013–Present.
Canadian International Council: Montreal Branch, Director at Large, 2012–Present.
National Press Club, Washington: Member, Foreign Correspondents Committee, 2012–Present.
Invited Discussant, scores of policy workshops, Europe
and North America, 2001–Present; in particular, Invited Expert
Participant, workshops, roundtables and conferences (Centre
for
European Policy Studies, Energy Charter Secretariat, Friends of
Europe, Madariaga–College of Europe Foundation, New Defence
Agenda), Brussels, 2004–Present.
Scores of radio and television interviews in English, French and Russian, 1985–Present. A small sample is available at <http://oilgaseuropeasia.com/audio/>.
Speaker and Specialist Grantee, Office of International Programs, U.S. Department of State, September–October 2009, June 2010, September 2012.
Appointed Member, Nominating Committee, Kyoto Prize in Arts and Philosophy, Inamori Foundation, 2007–2008.
Elected Member, Legal, Economic and Regulatory Affairs Council, Gehrson Lehman Group, September 2006.
Elected Member, International Institute of Strategic Studies, London, August 2006.
The Dialogue International, Dubai (U.A.E.): Advisory Committee, 2005–2008.
Energy Security Specialist, Global Security Program, EastWest Institute, Brussels, 2004–2005.
Institutional Design Specialist, International Law and Human Rights Programme, Parliamentarians for Global Action, New York, 2003–2005.
Rapporteur, “Towards a Parliamentary Assembly of the International Criminal Court?” Second Session of the Consultative Assembly of Parliamentarians for the International Criminal Court and the Rule of Law, New York, 12–13 September 2003.
Expert Witness on Human Rights in Central Asia, Immigration Appeals Court (New Jersey), U.S. Department of Justice, 2002–2010.
International Research Foundation for Development: Executive Board, 2001–2004; NGO Representative to the Economic and Social Council of the United Nations, 2000–2004.
External Collaborator, CEPS Task Force for the Caucasus, Centre for European Policy Studies, Brussels, 2000–2002.
Invited Testimony, Standing Committee on Foreign Affairs and International Trade, House of Commons, Ottawa, 5 May 2000.
Charter Contributor, NIS Global Information Project, Eurasia Foundation, 2000.
Rapporteur, “Financing Eurasian Energy for the 21st Century: The U.S. Strategic Perspective on Caspian Energy,” Second EastWest Leaders’ Forum, Institute for EastWest Studies, New York City, July 1998.
Forum for U.S.–Soviet Dialogue, U.S. Delegation: Member, Commission on Regional Conflict, 19th Annual Conference, Minsk (U.S.S.R.), 1–15 July 1991; Co-Chair, Commission on U.S.–Soviet Relations, 18th Annual Conference, West Point (N.Y.), 8–14 July 1990.
Member, U.S. Delegation, American Council for International Leadership, Joint Seminar on U.S.–Soviet Relations, Leningrad, 10–31 May 1987.
Contributor, “Assessment of Draft Program and Budget for 1986–1987 of UNESCO”, Report prepared for the U.S. National Commission for UNESCO, 1985.
5. Teaching Experience
5.1 University Courses Taught
5.1.1. International Relations
Introduction to International Relations / Theories of International Relations
Three graduate courses and one undergraduate course.
Seminar in
International Relations / Readings in International Relations
Five
undergraduate courses in fields of: International
Political Economy;
Transnational Public Policy;
International Organization.
Foreign Policies of
the Soviet Successor States / Soviet Foreign Policy
Four
graduate courses and nine undergraduate courses.
Dimensions of European Security
One graduate course.
5.1.2. Comparative Politics
Introduction to
Comparative Politics / Pro-Seminar in Comparative Politics
Two
graduate courses and one undergraduate course.
Politics of the
Soviet Successor States / Soviet Political System
Three
graduate courses and ten undergraduate courses.
Comparative
Communist Systems and Transitions
Two
undergraduate courses.
5.1.3. Political Philosophy
History of European
Socialism
One
undergraduate course.
Seminar in Political
Philosophy
One
undergraduate course.
5.2. Other Teaching Experience
Graduate Student Teaching Assistant for the following undergraduate courses in
International Relations: Introduction to International Relations, Topics in World Politics, Soviet Foreign Policy
Comparative Politics: Political Development and Dependence, Comparative Communist Systems, West European Politics
Political Philosophy: Political Philosophy and Poetry
University of Michigan 1977–1981; Pennsylvania State University, 1974–1976.
High school
instructor in private secondary schools in
Pennsylvania
(introductory
psychology, American history),
Autumn 1974.
Massachusetts (mathematics, physics, geology), Spring 1974.
Undergraduate tutor
in community high-school program
Philosophy,
Politics and Economics,
Massachusetts Institute of Technology, 1972–1973.
5.3. Theses and Graduate Degree Essays Supervised and Evaluated
5.3.1. Carleton University
Examiner, M.A. Essay
Defence Jury, Institute of European and Russian Studies
Emil
Torosyan, “The Energy Factor in Russian Foreign Policy Making,”
Autumn 2005.
Examiner, M.A. Essay
Defence Jury, Norman Paterson School of International Affairs
Helgi
Maki, “The Legal Status of the Caspian Sea,” Autumn 2000.
5.3.2. Russian Academy of Sciences
Evaluator, Doctor of
Sciences Defence Jury, Institute of Philosophy
P.V.
Glazkov, “Филисофия
свободы М.А.
Бакунина” [The
Philosophy of Freedom of M.A. Bakunin], Spring 2005.
5.3.3. Université Laval
Directeur de
recherche, Mémoire pour M.A., Département de Science
politique
Eric-Jan Zubrzycki, “La genèse
de Solidarité: Tensions et déchirements au sein du KOR,
1976–1981,” 1990–1991.
Yves Goulet,
“L’adaptation politique: Une étude de cas de la
politique étrangère sovié-
tique dans le
Golfe persique durant la Guerre Iran-Irak, 1980–1988,”
1990–1991.
Martin Bourgeois, “La crise afghane: Une
analyse de la transformation du comportement ‘adaptif’
de l’État soviétique à partir de son
invasion jusqu’au retrait de ses forces militaires du
territoire de l’Afghanistan,” 1988–1989 (Essai de
recherche).
Membre de Jury,
Mémoire pour M.A., Département de Science
politique
Robert Duguay, “L’analyse de
l’OACI en tant qu’organisation internationale,”
Winter 1991.
Liisa Coulombe, “Cohésion et dissension
: l’ANZUS et la sécurité régionale de 1983 à
1989,” Winter 1990.
Marie-Laurence Poirel, “À
propos de la postérité arendtienne dans l’appréhension
du phénomène soviétique: Réflexion
préliminaire sur le concept d’Homo Sovieticus,”
Autumn 1989.
5.3.4. University of California at Santa Barbara
Thesis Advisor,
Senior Honor’s Thesis, Department of Political Science
Colin
Stevens, “The Kádár Era: Reform and Legitimacy in
Hungary,” 1987–1988.
James T. Alexander, “The
Formation of the 1977 Soviet Constitution,” 1985–1986.
6. Research Accomplishments
6.1. Principal Research Contributions
6.1.1. Most Significant Contributions Demonstrating Capacity for Innovation
Principal Investigator of competitive scientific research grants from funding organizations from Canada, France, Switzerland and the United States, with an aggregate total value of approximately $400,000.
Designed and wrote the institutional blueprint for the Consultative Assembly of Parliamentarians for the International Criminal Court and the Rule of Law (the only global institution composed of legislators focusing solely on the ICC), defining its structure, responsibilities and functions in consultation with the NGO Parliamentarians for Global Action, which houses its Secretariat.
A double-blind peer-reviewed article for a UNESCO-sponsored encyclopedia formally demonstrated the logical status of complexity theory as a new mathematical-logical “system of negation” and presents the specifics of its epistemological particularities.
A double-blind peer-reviewed book chapter (University of Toronto Press) was the first global-scale sociological analysis of international parliamentary institutions (IPIs), founding the field of comparative IPI studies.
The Ph.D. dissertation was the first-ever monograph-length systematic comparative case-study analysis of either Soviet foreign policy or Soviet foreign policy making.
6.1.2. Most Significant Contributions Demonstrating Authoritativeness
Regularly accepted as Expert Witness by the Immigration Appeals Court, U.S. Department of Justice, providing Expert Opinions concerning appellants from different Central Asian states seeking asylum for reasons of political, religious and gender-based discrimination.
A double-blind peer-reviewed article in the flagship academic journal of the Academic Council of the United Nations System (Global Governance) innovated the influential policy concept of Cooperative Energy Security. Invited to join the Centre for European Policy Studies (CEPS) Caucasus Working Group, he promoted these ideas. They were incorporated into the Working Group’s final report as policy recommendations, whereupon the European Parliament’s Foreign Affairs Committee adopted them intact as official resolutions. New platforms for energy dialogue (notably Baku Initiative) were then created among the countries of the EU, Black Sea and Caspian Sea basins, where none had existed before.
A double-blind peer-reviewed study of EEC–CMEA relations (International Affairs, London) had determinant influence on EEC decision-makers in forming policy towards the Soviet-bloc countries in the late 1980s.
A double-blind peer-reviewed academic journal article (International Studies Quarterly) on the international political economy of the Soviet bloc’s military relations with the Third World was the first-ever such comprehensive study and remains the authoritative treatment over 25 years after publication.
6.1.3. Most Significant Contributions Demonstrating Capacity for Foresight
Correctly predicted in the late 1990s that the unipolar U.S.-centered post-Cold War international transition would end in 2001, producing a new multipolar international system.
Numerous publications and addresses delivered since 1991 have made a series of correct predictions concerning strategic oil and gas pipeline feasibility and choices made by principal actors in Eurasian energy development.
A book chapter written in 1990 and published in 1991 (before the Soviet Union disintegrated) correctly predicted Russia’s future foreign policy behaviour towards Greece and Turkey.
The first major professional publication, a double-blind peer-reviewed journal article (Comparative Politics) written in the late 1970s, accepted for publication before the author achieved Ph.D. candidacy, correctly predicted exactly how the Communist Party would lose domestic political hegemony in the Soviet Union after Leonid I. Brezhnev’s death (1982).
6.2. Selected Research Awards
[Items marked “(*)” are taken from Section 2, above.]
6.2.1. Selected Post-doctoral Research Awards
Research Development Initiative Grant, Social Science and Humanities Research Council of Canada, 2000–2002. (Declined.)
Research Grant, “Multiple Centres of Power” Team, Project on Trends, Social Science and Humanities Council of Canada, Ottawa, 1998–2001.
Professional Partnerships Grant, Association of Universities and Colleges of Canada, for cooperation with Vilnius University, Autumn 1997.
Standard Research Grant, World Society Foundation, Zurich, 1996–1998.
Co-principal Investigator, Research and Development Grant, Social Science Research Council, New York, 1994–1996.
Research Grant, Co-operative Security Program, Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Government of Canada, 1993–1994. (Declined.)
Post-doctoral Grant for Training in Central Asian Studies, Indiana University, Summer 1993.(*)
Standard Research Grant, Social Science and Humanities Research Council, 1991–1994.
Research Grant, Department of Foreign Affairs and International Trade, Government of Canada, 1989–1991.
Research Associate, Center for Soviet and East European Studies, University of Pennsylvania, Autumn 1987.
Research Associate, Summer Research Laboratory, Center for Russian and East European Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Summer 1986 and Summer 1987.
Stipendiary Scholar, Seminar on Soviet–American Relations, Institute for Global Cooperation and Conflict, University of California at San Diego, Summer 1986.
Post-doctoral Fellow in Russian and Soviet Studies, Social Science Research Council and American Council of Learned Societies, 1985–1988.(*)
Stipendiary Scholar, Berlin Seminar, Bradley University and Europäische Akademie Berlin, Summer 1985.
Young Scholar Travel Grant, International Political Science Association, Summer 1985.
Research Fellow, University Scientific Council and Department of International Economics, University of Nantes, France, 1984–1985.
Stipendiary Independent Scholar, Center for Russian and East European Studies, University of Illinois at Champaign–Urbana, Fall 1984. (Declined.)
Mellon Post-doctoral Fellow, The W. Averell Harriman Institute for Advanced Study of the Soviet Union, Columbia University, 1983–1984.(*)
IREX Post-doctoral Fellow, Faculty of Contemporary History, Moscow State University, 1982–1983.(*)
Fulbright-Hayes Travel Grant, International Research and Exchanges Board (IREX), New York, 1982–1983.
IREX Stipendiary Scholar, Russian Language Program, Middlebury College, Summer 1982.
6.2.2. Pre-doctoral Training Awards
Dissertation Grant, Rackham School of Graduate Studies, University of Michigan, Winter 1982.
National Resource Fellowship, Center for Russian and East European Studies, University of Michigan, 1981–1982.
Research Associate, Summer Research Laboratory, Center for Russian and East European Studies, University of Illinois at Urbana-Champaign, Summer 1981.
Stipendiary Instructor, Mellon Foundation Seminar for the Teaching of Writing, College of Literature, Science and the Arts, University of Michigan, Winter 1981.
Albert Gallatin International Affairs Fellow, International History and Politics Faculty, Graduate Institute of International Studies, University of Geneva, 1979–1980.(*)
Graduate Student Travel Grant, Council for European Studies, Winter 1979.
University Fellowship, School of Graduate Studies, University of Michigan, 1976–1977.
Graduate Grant-in-Aid, The Pennsylvania State University, Summer 1976.
Young Scholars Grant, National Endowment for the Humanities, Washington (D.C.), 1975-1977.
National Defense Foreign Language Fellowship, Slavic and Soviet Language and Area Center, The Pennsylvania State University, 1975–1976.
Regular Scholarship, Institut d’études françaises d’Avignon, Bryn Mawr College, Summer 1973.
7. Research Presentations
7.1. Papers to Professional Associations
68. “The Central Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex: From Central Asia to Central Europe,” International Convention of Asia Scholars, Eighth World Congress, Macao, 24–27 June 2013.
67. “The European Parliament as a Complex System: Understanding Its Organizational Development,” Italian Society of Political Science, Twenty-sixth Annual Congress, Rome, 13–15 September 2012. Principal co-author.
66. “Energy and Politics in Central Asia and the Caucasus,” Peace and Conflict Society, Fourth Annual Conference, University of Toronto, 9–11 October 2009. [Outline.]
65. “The Strategic Significance of Human Geography in Greater Central Asia,” Peace and Conflict Society, Fourth Annual Conference, University of Toronto, 9–11 October 2009. [Outline.]
64. “Russia’s Emerging Place in the Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex,” International Studies Association, Fiftieth Annual Convention, New York, 15–18 February 2009. [Publication.]
63. “Existential Threat in Soviet Foreign Policy Problem Representation towards Western Europe,” International Studies Association, Fiftieth Annual Convention, New York, 15–18 February 2009.
62. “Evolution of the European Parliament as an International Institution and Its Autonomy as an International Actor,” Fourth Pan-European Conference on EU Politics, European Consortium for Political Research, Riga, 25–27 September 2008. Co-author.
61. “How the European Parliament Is a Complex (Adaptive?) System and Why This Is Important,” International Studies Association, Forty-ninth Annual Convention, San Francisco (Calif.), 26–29 March 2008.
60. “Soviet Foreign Policy in the 1974 French Presidential Succession,” Northeastern Political Science Association, Philadelphia (Penna.), 15–17 November 2007.
59. “State Construction of Power, Vision and Order: A Behaviour Production Cycle of the National Interest,” Nordic International Studies Association, Odense Conference, Odense (Denmark), 23–25 May 2007.
58. “The Structuration of the Greater Central Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex,” Association for the Study of Nationalities, Twelfth Annual World Convention, New York, 12–14 April 2007. [Publication.]
57. “Origin and Development of the ‘Tripartite Alliance for Cooperative Energy Security’ Concept,” International Studies Association, Forty-eighth Annual Convention, Convention Theme Panel Political Knowledge and Expertise in International Relations, Chicago (Ill.), 28 February – 3 March 2007. [Publication.]
56. “A Proof Method under ‘Complex Refutability’,” New England Complex Systems Institute, Sixth International Conference on Complex Systems, Boston (Mass.), 25–30 June 2006.
55. “Geopolitics of Central Asian Energy and the Structuration of the Emerging International System,” Middle East Technical University, Fifth METU Conference on International Relations, Ankara, 15–17 June 2006. [Publication.]
54. “The Soviet ‘Recognition’ of the E.E.C. in 1971–72: International and Domestic Determinants of Decision-Making,” New England Political Science Association, Annual Conference, Portsmouth (N.H.), 5–6 May 2006.
53. “Organizational Design and Transformation in a Complex World,” Washington Evolutionary Systems Society, Washington Academy of Sciences, Annual Capital Science Conference, National Science Foundation, Arlington (Va.), 25–26 March 2006. [Publication.]
52. “Is Kazakh Nationalism Soluble in Oil?: The Hydrocarbonization of National Interest in Kazakhstan,” Association for the Study of Nationalities, Eleventh Annual World Convention, New York, 23–25 March 2006.
51. “The Paradox of Intentional Emergent Coherence: Informational Requirements for Autopoietic Development,” École Nationale Supérieure de Techniques Avancées, Third Conference on Foundations of Information Science, Paris, 4–7 July 2005. [Publication.]
50. “Caspian Energy Pipelines as a Complex System,” Association for the Study of Nationalities, Ninth World Convention, New York, 15–17 April 2004. [Publication.]
49. “Complexity Science Intermediates Neorealism/Neoliberalism with Critical/World-System Theory,” International Studies Association, Forty-fifth Annual Convention, Montreal, 17–20 March 2004.
48. “Towards a Theory of Complex World Society,” New England Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia (Penna.), 6–8 November 2003.
47. “Transnational Policies for Conflict Reduction and Prevention in the South Caucasus,” Central Eurasian Studies Society, Third Annual Convention, Madison (Wisc.), 17–20 October 2002. [Publication.]
46. “U.S.–Russia–India Cooperation: Implications for the Turkic World,” Association for the Study of Nationalities, Sixth Annual Convention, New York, 5–7 April 2001. [Outline.]
45. “Expliquer les faillites des mouvements démocratiseurs: La trahison des clercs-candidats,” Eighteenth World Congress, International Political Science Association, Quebec City (Que.), 1–6 August 2000. Co-author. [Publication.]
44. “International Parliamentary Institutions: A Survey and Analysis of a New Phenomenon in ‘World Society’,” International Studies Association, Forty-first Annual Convention, Los Angeles, 15–19 March 2000. [Publication.]
43. “What Complexity Science Really Means for International Relations Theory,” International Studies Association, Forty-first Annual Convention, Los Angeles, 15–19 March 2000. [Publication.]
42. “The European Parliament in Comparative International Perspective,” European Sociological Association, Fourth Conference, Amsterdam, 18–21 August 1999. [Publications.]
41. “The Paradox of Intentional Emergent Coherence,” New England Complex Systems Institute, Third Colloquium on Complex Systems and the Management of Organizations, Boston (Mass.), 17–21 March 1999. [Publication.]
40. “Theses on the Evolution of International Systems and the Nature of the Current International Transition,” New England Complex Systems Institute, Second International Conference on Complex Systems, Nashua (N.H.), 25–30 October 1998. [Publication.]
39. “What the ‘National Interest’ Means in a Transnational ‘World Society’: Or, Groundwork for a Methodology of Constructivist-SciRealist Synthesis,” Third Pan-European International Relations Conference and Joint Meeting with the International Studies Association, Vienna, 16–19 September 1998.
38. “Foreign-Domestic Linkages in a ‘Newly Independent State’: The Origin and Genesis of Kazakhstan’s Foreign Policy,” American Political Science Association, Ninety-fourth Annual Meeting, Boston (Mass.), 3–6 September 1998. [Publication.]
37. “Globalism and Collaboration in World Politics: The Proliferation of International Parliamentary Institutions and the Viability of ‘International Society’,” American Political Science Association, Ninety-fourth Annual Meeting, Boston (Mass.), 3–6 September 1998. [Publication.]
36. “Re-examining the ‘Civic Culture’ Hypothesis,” International Sociological Association, Fourteenth World Congress, Montreal, 25–31 July 1998.
35. “Kazakhstan’s Foreign Policy from Sovereignty to the Present,” Association for Study of Nationalities, Third Annual Conference, New York, 25–27 April 1998. [Publication.]
34. “How Soviet Foreign Policy Failed to Manage Complexity,” New England Complex Systems Institute, First Colloquium on Complex Systems and the Management of Organizations, Toronto, 3–5 April 1998. [Publication.]
33. “Western Security Interests in Central Asia: Do Inter-ethnic Conflicts Matter?”, International Studies Association, Thirty-eighth Annual Congress, Toronto, 19–22 March 1997. [Publication.]
32. “The EU’s Common Foreign and Security Policy as an ‘Issue Area’ in Comparative Perspective,” European Community Studies Associations, Second World Congress, Brussels, 19–20 September 1996.
31. “The EU’s Common Foreign and Security Policy in Comparative Perspective: An ‘Issue Area’ Approach to Its Relations with Eastern Europe and Central Asia,” European Community Studies Association of Canada, Second Annual Meeting, St. Catherine’s (Ont.), 6–8 June 1996.
30. “The Soviet ‘Recognition’ of the European Economic Community in the Early 1970s,” European Social Science History Association, Second Congress, Noordwijkerhout (The Netherlands), 19–21 May 1996.
29. “The Sources of Kazakhstani Conduct: With a Survey of Its Foreign Policy Behaviour until Mid-1994,” Association for Study of Nationalities, First Annual Conference, New York (N.Y.), 26–28 April 1996. [Publication.]
28. “Religion and Political ‘Modernization’
in ex-Soviet Central Asia,” International Society for Sociology
of Religion, Twenty-third Congress, Québec
(Qué.), 26–30 June 1995.
[Publication.]
27. “The Psycho-historiography of Mikhail Bakunin and the Social Psychology of Europe after Marxism-Leninism,” International Political Science Association, Fifteenth World Congress, Berlin, 22–26 August 1994. [Publication.]
26. “The Evolution of Co-operation among Communists: Unobserved Integration among the Soviet Successor States,” International Studies Association, Thirty-fifth Annual Congress, Washington (D.C.), 29 March – 3 April 1994.
25. “An International Relations Theory Approach to the National Interests of the Soviet Successor States,” American Political Science Association, Eighty-ninth Annual Meeting, Washington (D.C.), 1–5 September 1993. [Publication.]
24. “Russian Foreign Policy from Empire to Commonwealth: Toward an Historical Sociology of Central Eurasian International Relations,” International Studies Association, Thirty-fourth Annual Congress, Acapulco (Mexico), 24–27 March 1993.
23. “What International Relations Theory Doesn’t Tell Us about Changes in Soviet Foreign Policy, and What Those Changes Tell Us about International Relations Theory,” International Studies Association, Thirty-third Annual Congress, Atlanta (Ga.), 13–16 March 1992. [Publication.]
22. “Theories of Foreign-Domestic Linkages in Soviet Politics,” American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Twenty-fourth National Convention, Miami (Fla.), 21–24 November 1991. [Publications.]
21. “Soviet Press Reform, Leadership Succession, and Foreign Policy,” Northeast Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia (Pa.), 14–16 November 1991. [Publications.]
20. “The Architecture of E.C. Relations with Central and Eastern Europe: ‘Common House’ or Neighbourhood Improvement?” European Community Studies Association [of the United States], Second Biennial Conference, Fairfax (Va.), 22–24 May 1991.
19. “Soviet Economic Multilateralism: Perspectives on Relations with GATT, IMF, and the World Bank,” International Studies Association, Thirty-second Annual Congress, Vancouver (B.C.), 19–23 March 1991. [Publication.]
18. “Reconceptualizing U.S.–Soviet Relations: The Potential of the United Nations,” Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate (U.K.), 21–26 July 1990. [Publication.]
17. “Bakunin and the Psychobiographers: The Anarchist as Mythical and Historical Object,” Fourth World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Harrogate (U.K.), 21–26 July 1990. [Publication.]
16. “L’évolution de la politique médiatique de Gorbatchev,” Association canadienne-française pour l’avancement des sciences, 58th Annual Congress, Quebec City (Que.), 16–17 May 1990. [Publication.]
15. “The Role of the EEC in Soviet Policy toward Western Europe,” International Studies Association, Thirty-first Annual Congress, Washington (D.C.), 10–14 April 1990.
14. “East–South Relations in Global Perspective,” Northeast Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, Philadelphia (Penna.), 9–11 November 1989. [Publication.]
13. “L’environnement diplomatique multilatérale et la ‘nouvelle pensée politique’,” Centre québécois de relations internationales, Twenty-first Annual Congress, Quebec City (Que.), 28–29 September 1989. [Publication.]
12. “The Civic Culture Retested: Collective Crises of Political Development and the Individual Level of Analysis,” Canadian Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, Quebec City (Que.), 1–3 June 1989.
11. “The East–South/East–West Nexus: Do Communist Countries’ Relations with the Developing World Depend on Their Relations with the New World, and If So How?,” International Studies Association, Thirtieth Annual Congress, London, 28 March – 1 April 1989. [Publication.]
10. “La ‘doctrine Reagan’ et la guerre afghane,” Centre québécois de relations internationales, Twentieth Annual Congress, Quebec City (Que.), 6–7 October 1988 [Publication.]
9. “Does Soviet Foreign Policy Learn?,” Western Political Science Association, Annual Meeting, Anaheim (Calif.), 26–28 March 1987. [Publications.]
8. “Past and Future of EEC–CMEA Relations,” International Studies Association, Twenty-seventh Annual Convention, Anaheim (Cal.), 25–29 March 1986. [Publication.]
7. “Reporting Foreign News and Making Foreign Policy in the Soviet Union,” Third World Congress for Soviet and East European Studies, Washington (D.C.), 30 October – 4 November 1985. [Publications.]
6. “Arms Transfers and Military Technology Transfers in East-South Relations,” International Political Science Association, Paris, Thirteenth World Congress, 15–20 July 1985. [Publication.]
5. “Political Culture, Legitimacy, and Crises of Development,” American Political Science Association, Eightieth Annual Meeting, Washington (D.C.), 30 August – 4 September 1984.
4. “Organizational Processes in Soviet Foreign Policy Making,” International Studies Association, Twenty-fifth Annual Convention, Atlanta (Ga.), 22–26 March 1984. [Publications.]
3. “Soviet Policy Making in the 1974 Cyprus Conflict,” American Association for the Advancement of Slavic Studies, Sixteenth National Convention, St. Louis (Mo.), 15–18 November 1983. [Publication.]
2. “On the Trail of the Elusive Policy: An Empirical Investigation of the Predictive Limits of Cognitive Mapping and How to Surpass Them,” Joint Sessions of the European Consortium for Political Research, Florence, 24–28 March 1980. [Publication.]
1. “The View from the Urals: West European Integration in Soviet Perspective and Policy,” Council for European Studies, First Conference of Europeanists, Washington (D.C.), 23–25 March 1979. [Publication.]
7.2. Invited Workshops and Seminars
76. “Transparency in Azerbaijan: The EITI Experience,” Colloquium Geo-Eco Politics, Eurasian Energy, and (Elusive) Transparency, The Harriman Institute, School of International and Public Affairs, Columbia University, New York, 16 April 2013.
75. “Geopolitics and Economics of Caspian Sea Basin Energy,” Workshop Energy Politics & Cooperation Potential, Caspian Basin: Turkey, Azerbaijan and Canada Perspectives, Faculty of Public Affairs, Carleton University, Ottawa, 7 March 2013.
74. “Recent Developments in Central Asian Energy,” Radio Free Europe/Radio Liberty, Prague, 26 September 2012.
73. “East Central Europe’s Place in Euro-Caspian Energy Security,” Faculty of Social Sciences, Masaryk University, Brno (Czech Republic), 24 September 2012.
72. “Energy Geo-Economıcs in the Caspian Sea and the Black Sea Politics,” International Symposium Common Governance Culture and Restructuring Problems in the Three Seas Basin Countries, Aydin University, Istanbul, 13–16 October 2011.
71. “The Role of East Central Europe in Euro-Caspian Energy Security,” Hungarian Institute of International Affairs, Budapest, 18 June 2010.
70. “Romania’s Place in the Central Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex,” Seminar of the Graduate Faculty, Petroleum and Gas University, Ploiesti, Romania, 14 June 2010.
69. “The Importance of the Caspian and Central Asia as a Source of and Transit Route for Energy,” Wilton Park Conference The South Caucasus and Wider Black Sea Neighbourhood: Regional Developments and Euro-Atlantic Integration, Wiston House, West Sussex (U.K.), 23–26 November 2009. [Prepared remarks.]
68. “European–Caspian Energy Links,” Colloquium Azerbaijan in the Caspian Geopolitical Context, Norman Paterson School of International Affairs, Carleton University, Ottawa, 12 November 2009. [Publication.]
67. “Energy Security in the Caucasus and the Situation of Armenia,” Ministry of Energy and Natural Resources, Government of Armenia, Yerevan, 6 October 2009.
66. “Prospects for Energy Security in the Caucasus–Caspian Region,” Caucasus Institute, Yerevan, 5 October 2009.
65. “The Situation in Azerbaijan and Georgia,” Embassy of the United States to the Republic of Armenia, Yerevan, 5 October 2009.
64. “The Structuration of the Central Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex,” Georgian Foundation for Strategic and International Studies, Tbilisi, 2 October 2009.
63. “Caspian Energy Security,” Institute of European Studies, Tbilisi State University, Tbilisi, 2 October 2009.
62. “Geopolitical Implications of the Wider Black Sea – Caspian Sea Basin for Azerbaijan’s Energy Security,” Center for Strategic Studies, Office of the President of the Republic of Azerbaijan, Baku, 29 September 2009. [Publication.]
61. “Current Problems of Energy Policy, Politics and Economics in the Caspian Sea Region,” Azerbaijan Diplomatic Academy, Baku, 29 September 2009.
60. “Cooperative Energy Security and the Role of Civil-society NGOs,” Extractive Industries Transparency Initiative (EITI) Public Union Coalition, Baku, 28 September 2009.
59. “The Central Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex: Evolution and Prospects,” Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies, The Smithsonian Institution, Washington (D.C.), 18 May 2009.
58. “Cooperative Energy Security for Sustainable Development: An Emerging Norm,” Colloquium The Architecture of the Energy (Oil and Gas) Export System of the Caucasus and Central Asia: Now and in The Future, The Harriman Institute and Center of Energy, Marine Transportation and Public Policy, Columbia University, New York, 21 April 2009.
57. “The Evolution of the European Parliament,” International Conference The Road Europe Travelled Along, Associazione Universitaria di Studi Europea, University of Siena, 23–24 May 2008. Co-author.
56. “Complexity and Central Controversies and Debates in International Relations: The End of the Cold War,” National Science Foundation Workshop Complexity Science in International Relations, San Francisco (Calif.), 25 March 2008.
55. “The Turkmenistan-Afghanistan-Pakistan-India Pipeline Project: Alternative to the Iran- Pakistan-India Project or Independent Addition to the Central-Southeast Asian Energy Space?” Colloquium Eurasian Pipelines – Road to Peace, Development and Interdependencies: The Pipeline Race to India and Pakistan, Harriman Institute and Center of Energy, Marine Transportation and Public Policy, Columbia University, New York, 12–13 November 2007.
54. “Development of the European Union’s European Neighbourhood Program in the South Caucasus: An Instance of Incipient Organizational Learning,” Conference Much Ado about Nothing? The European Neighbourhood Policy since 2003, Nottingham (U.K.), 25–26 October 2007. [Publication.]
53. “The Geo-economics of Central Asian Energy,” Conference Spotlight on Asia’s Energy and Security Challenges: A Multilateral Response? S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, Singapore, 7–8 September 2007. [Publication.]
52. “Overview and Comparison of Frozen Conflicts in the Former Soviet Areas,” Queen’s University, Centre for International Relations, Workshop Frozen Conflicts, Kingston (Ont.), 20 April 2007. [Summary.]
51. “Navigating the Paradox of Intentional Emergent Coherence,” New England Complex Systems Institute, Cambridge (Mass.), 5 May 2006. [Publication.]
50. “The Future of European Energy,” Center for Strategic and International Studies, Global Dialogue on Natural Resources, Panel Energy in Europe, Washington (D.C.), 3–4 April 2006. [Sound recording.]
49. “PGA Strategic Review and Planning Document,” Parliamentarians for Global Action, Strategic Review and Planning Meeting, Boston (Mass.), 17–18 October 2005.
48. “De-authoritarization in Uzbekistan?: Analysis and Prospects,” University of Leiden, International Institute for Asian Studies, NATO Advanced Research Workshop Towards Social Stability and Democratic Governance in Central Eurasia: Challenges to Regional Security, Leiden (The Netherlands), 8–11 September 2004. [Publication.]
47. “The OSCE’s Parliamentary Diplomacy in Central Asia and the South Caucasus in Comparative Perspective,” Norwegian Institute of International Affairs, Plenary Session on the OSCE in Central Asia and the Caucasus, International Conference Multilateral Organisations in the Caucasus and Central Asia, Oslo, 10 11 June 2004. [Publication.] Pre-print available (PDF, 211Kb).
46. “The Geo-Economics of Kazakhstani Oil: Key to the Caspian Energy Complex,” Carleton University, Institute of European and Russian Studies, Ottawa, 4 March 2004.
45. “The Geo-Economics of Energy Resource Development in Independent Kazakhstan,” University of Toronto, Centre for Russian and East European Studies, Colloquium Modern Kazakhstan: Between East and West, 5 December 2003.
44. “Competition for Energy Resources as a Source of Conflict in Central Asia: Comparison with Caspian and Caucasus Region,” U.N. University for Peace and Central European University, International Workshop Training in Civil Society, Pilot Program for Conflict Prevention in Central Asia, Budapest, 15–16 July 2002. [Publication.]
43. “E.U. Enlargement and the Parliamentarization of Its Institutional Reform,” Carleton University, Centre for European and Russian Studies and Program in European Union Studies, Workshop Identity and Representation in an Integrated Europe, Ottawa, May 9–10, 2002. Co-author. [Publication.]
42. “The Central Asian Crucible after September 11,” McGill University, Centre for Developing Area Studies, Seminar “A New Great Game”: Panel Discussion on the Geopolitics of Central Asia, Montreal, 18 April 2002. [Publication.]
41. “La Turquie entre les politiques énergétiques européenne et américaine,” Fondation nationale des sciences politiques, Centre d’études et de recherches internationales, Journées d’études La Turquie dans les politiques europeénne et américaine: Convergences, divergences et interactions, Paris, 10–11 December 2001.
40. “The ‘War on Terrorism’: Ramifications for Central Asia” American University of Paris with North Atlantic Treaty Organization and European Union Institute of Security Studies, Colloquium New World, New Europe, New Threats: NATO and the European Union in the New Millennium, Paris, 7–8 December 2001. [Publication.]
39. “‘What Is Complexity Science?’: Why This Is the Wrong Question,” Institute for the Study of Coherence and Emergence and University for Humanist Studies, Conference on Practice(s) of Meaning, Utrecht, 23–26 September 2001. [Publication.]
38. “The European Union’s Approach to Human Capital in Central Asia,” Aga Khan Foundation Canada, Roundtable Central Asia: Investing in Human Capital, Ottawa, 12–13 September 2001. [Outline.]
37. “Geo-cultural Behaviours in Contemporary Kazakhstan,” University of Toronto, Central and Inner Asia Seminar and Joint Centre for Asia–Pacific Studies, Seventh Annual Conference, 4–5 May 2001. [Publication.]
36. “Complexity Theory and Organizational Learning,” Institute for the Study of Coherence and Emergence, Conference, Boston (Mass.), 6–8 April 2001. [Publication.]
35. “Canada Amidst New Networks of Transnational Complexity: The Potential of International Parliamentary Institutions,” Policy Research Secretariat, Policy Conference Canada in a Global Society, Ottawa, 30 November–1 December 2000. [Publication.]
34. “The Caspian Conundrum: Geopolitics of Oil in the Caspian Region ”, University of Toronto, Centre for Russian and East European Studies, Toronto, 24 November 2000. [Publication.]
33. “What Is Cooperative Energy Security, and Why Can’t They Practice It Around the Caspian?”, University of California at Berkeley, Berkeley Program in Soviet and Post-Soviet Studies, 16 November 1999. [Full text.]
32. “Multiple Centres of Power Roundtable,” International Development Research Centre, Ottawa, 22 October 1999. [Publication.]
31. “Planning for the Next International System: Two Policy Initiatives,” Privy Council [of Canada], Policy Research Initiative, Project on Trends, Workshop Multiple Centres of Power Team, Victoria (B.C.), 14–15 May 1999. [Full text.]
30. “How to Promote Energy Co-operation around the Caspian,” Tenth Annual Crans Montana Forum, Seminar on Caspian Energy, Crans Montana (Switzerland), 25–28 June 1998. [Publication.]
29. “Caspian Oil and Regional Development: Prerequisites for Resource Development in the Caucasus and Eurasia,” Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Center for International Studies, MIT Japan Program, Working Group Energy Security in Asia, Cambridge (Mass.), 26 February 1998. [Outline.]
28. “Outline of an Application of Transfinite Cardinal Arithmetic to the Game-Theoretic Analysis of International Relations,” Oxford University, Institute of Mathematics and its Applications, Conference Modelling International Conflict, 13–15 April 1997.
27. “Central Asia in U.S. Policy: Between Engagement and Commitment,” National Bureau of Asian Research and International Research and Exchanges Board, Conference The New Russia and the CIS in Asia, Washington (D.C.), 4–6 October 1995. [Publication.]
26. “Defining Western Interests: How Much Engagement is Practicable and How Much is Required,” Office of President of Finland and World Policy Institute (New York), International Conference The Search for Co-operative Security: Russia, the NIS and the West, Helsinki, 20–22 January 1995. [Publications.]
25. “Ordinal Preferences in Russian-Kazakhstani Relations,” Columbia University, The Harriman Institute, Workshop on Social Science Theory and Post-Soviet Realities, 8 December 1994. [Publication.]
24. “Внешняя политика современного Казахстана и его отношения к внутренным развитиям” [The Foreign Policy of Contemporary Kazakhstan and Its Relations to Domestic Developments], Al-Fabri Kazakhstan State University, Seminar of the Faculty of International Relations and Contemporary History, Almaty, 3 August 1994. [Publication.]
23. “Towards a Behaviour Production Cycle of the National Interest,” Panteois University, Institute of International Relations, Workshop International Relations Theory after the Cold War, Athens, 27–28 May 1994.
22. “The Contribution of the European Union, Its Institutions, and Its Members to Co-operative Security for the Soviet Successor States,” Associations for the Study of the European Community, Workshop Federalism and Subsidiarity in External Relations, Brussels, 5–6 May 1994. [Publication.]
21. “Kazakhstan between Russia and Asia,” Columbia University, The Harriman Institute, Seminar on the Foreign Policies of the Soviet Successor States, New York, 18 February 1994. [Publication.]
20. “Western International Relations Theory and the National Interest of the Soviet Successor States,” Columbia University, The Harriman Institute, New York, 19 May 1992. [Publication.]
19. “The Commonwealth of Independent States and International Relations Theory,” University of Maryland at College Park, Center for the Study of Post-Communist Societies, 3 March 1992. [Publication.]
18. “Soviet Reform, International Behaviour, and the Multilateral Financial Institutions,” Columbia University, School of International and Public Affairs, New York, 30 October 1991. [Publication.]
17. “The European Communities’ Evolving Relations with Central and Eastern Europe,” Institute for East–West Security Studies, New York, 15 May 1991.
16. “‘World Order’ and the United Nations in Soviet Foreign Policy Today,” Smithsonian Institution, Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies, Washington (D.C.), 15 October 1990. [Publication.]
15. “Multilateralism and Co-operation in Soviet Policy towards International Organizations,” The Harriman Institute, Columbia University, New York, 16 April 1990. [Publication.]
14. “Gorbachev’s European Policy in Perspective,” Institute for East–West Security Studies, New York, 11 May 1989. [Executive summary.]
13. “The CMEA Countries in the International Trading System,” Hungarian Academy of Sciences, Institute of World Economy, Budapest, 6 July 1988.
12. “Soviet Security Policy and the ‘New Political Thinking’ on International Organizations,” Rand Corporation, Santa Monica (Calif.), 12 February 1988. [Publication.]
11. “Roots of Soviet Attitudes toward International Co-operation,” Johns Hopkins University, School for Advanced International Studies, Washington (D.C.), 3 February 1988.
10. “Organizational Participation in Soviet Foreign Policy Making,” Massachusetts Institute of Technology, Center for International Studies, Cambridge (Mass.), 3 November 1987. [Publications.]
9. “Organizational Process and Soviet Foreign Policy Analysis,” Stanford University, Berkeley-Stanford Program in Soviet International Behavior, Stanford (Calif.), 3 March 1987. [Publications.]
8. “How to Analyze Soviet Foreign Policy Making,” University of Miami, Graduate School of International Studies, Miami (Fla.), 16 May 1986. [Publication.]
7. “The Soviet Media and Foreign Policy,” Rand/UCLA Center for the Study of Soviet International Behavior, Santa Monica (Calif.), 2 April 1986. [Publication.]
6. “EEC–CMEA Relations: Background and Prospects,” University of California at Los Angeles, Center for International and Strategic Affairs, Los Angeles (Calif.), 18 March 1986. [Publication.]
5. “Les pays socialistes et le Nouvel ordre économique international,” Université de Paris – I (Sorbonne), Centre d’économie internationale des pays socialistes, Paris, 12 January 1985.
4. “Precarious Makarios and the East Mediterranean Squeeze: The Soviet Union in the 1974 Cyprus Conflict,” Columbia University, The W. Averell Harriman Institute for the Advanced Study of the Soviet Union, 20 December 1983. [Publication.]
3. “The View from the Urals: West European Integration in Soviet Perspective and Policy,” Center for Western European Studies, 21 March 1979. [Publication.]
2. “Bakunin and Marx: A Hundred Years’ Perspective,” University of Michigan, Center for Russian and East European Studies, 26 January 1977. [Publication.]
1. “Regional Planning Philosophies in France and the Soviet Union,” University of Michigan, Center for Western European Studies, 19 January 1977.
7.3. Selected Public Addresses
27. “Azerbaijan in Central Eurasia: The Evolution of Its Geo-economic Situation”, Second Baku Forum of Association of Scholars of International Relations, 2–3 September 2013.
26. “Geopolitics and Economics of Caspian Sea Basin Energy,” Workshop Energy Politics and Co-operation Potential of the Caspian Basin, Modern Turkish Studies Initiative, Carleton University, 7 March 2013.
25. “East Central Europe’s Place in Euro-Caspian Energy Security,” American Center, Prague, 26 September 2012.
24. “Turco-Caspian Energy Security and the Caucasus: Threats and Opportunities,” Keynote Speech to Conference Energy Security and Regional Issues in the Caucasus, Uludağ University, Bursa (Turkey), 9–10 May 2012. [Published.]
23. “The Evolution of Eurasian Energy Networks as a Complex System,” Institute of World Economics, Hungarian Academy of Science, Budapest 19 June 2010.
22. “Hungary’s Place in the Central Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex,” Department of International Relations, Eötvös Loránd University, Budapest, 18 June 2010.
21 “Azerbaijan in the Caspian Geopolitical Context: European-Caspian Energy Links,” Norman Paterson School of International Affairs, Carleton University, Ottawa (Ont.), 12 November 2009.
20. “How Energy Politics and Economics Intersect in the South Caucasus,” American Chamber of Commerce, Yerevan, 6 October 2009.
19. “Caspian Energy Security,” Institute of Public Administration, Tbilisi, 1 October 2009.
18. “The Structuration of the Central Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex,” Faculty of Human and Social Sciences, Khazar University, Baku, 28 September 2009.
17. “The Sources and Regions of Crisis in the Caucasus,” organized by the Strategic Research and Study Center (SAREM), Turkish General Staff, Istanbul, 27–28 May 2004. [Transcript.] [Expanded into book chapter.]
16. “The Caucasus, Caspian Energy and Canadian Policy,” Canadian Institute of International Affairs, National Speakers’ Program, Thunder Bay (Ont.), 18 March 2003.
15. “The New Concept of Cooperative Energy Security: A Focus for Synthesizing Environmental and Energy Agendas through Local Participation under Sustainable Development,” United Nations, World Forum on Social Development, Second Preparatory Meeting for the Special Session of the U.N. General Assembly, New York, 6 April 2000. [Publication.]
14. “Energy Resources, Human Resources, and Co-operative Energy Security,” UNIDO Crans Montana Forum, Monaco Summit on Energy, Plenary Session Caspian Sea Resources, Monaco, 19–22 March 1998. [Transcript.] [Publication.]
13. “Why No Oil Yet? The New ‘Great Game’ in Central Asia,” MIT Club of Ottawa, Dinner Address, Ottawa, 27 November 1997.
12. “[For a EurAsian Oil and Gas Assocation (EAOGA)]” Keynote Address, Office of President of Finland and World Policy Institute (New York), International Conference The Search for Co-operative Security: Russia, the NIS and the West, Helsinki, 20–22 January 1995. [Transcript.] [Publications.]
11. “La guerre russo-tchétchène,” Centre de la sensibilisation au développement international, Laval University, Quebec City (Que.), 30 March 1995.
10. “La Biélorussie contemporaine,” L’Association pour la simulation des Nations-Unies de l’Université Laval, Laval University, Quebec City (Que.), 9 February 1995.
9. “Settling the Cyprus Conflict: Its Regional Context and International Significance,” Panteios University, International Congress of the Hellenic Society of International Law and International Relations, Athens, 3 October 1992. [Transcript.]
8. “Is the Soviet Union the Future of Canada?”, Smithsonian Institution, Kennan Institute for Advanced Russian Studies, Washington (D.C.), 3 March 1992.
7. “Will Russia and the Soviet Union Be Democratic in the Year 2000?” Columbia University, International House, New York, 19 October 1991.
6. “La glasnost entre deux chaises: De la politique de la presse à la politique étrangère,” Colloque internationale Le renouveau politique en Union soviétique, Laval University, Quebec City (Que.), 22–23 September 1988. [Transcript.]
5. “Gorbachev through the Looking-glasnost,” University of California at Santa Barbara, Department of Political Science, Santa Barbara (Calif.), 5 June 1987.
4. “The Meaning of the Reykjavik Summit,” University of California at Santa Barbara, Global Peace and Security Program, Santa Barbara (Calif.), 25 October 1986.
3. “What the [1985 Reagan–Gorbachev] Geneva Summit Was About,” Luncheon Address, University of California at Santa Barbara, University Affiliates, Santa Barbara (Calif.), 19 January 1986. [Transcript.]
2. “The Soviet Union and World Order,” Program on Global Peace and Security, University of California at Santa Barbara, 12 November 1985. [Publication.]
1. “Soviet Relations and the Brezhnev Succession,” Foreign Policy Association, Great Decisions Program, Invited Speaker and Group Discussion Leader, Tucson (Ariz.), 1984–1985. Several groups on different dates.
8. Professional and Institutional Service
8.1. Editorial Service
Member, Editorial or Academic Advisory Board: Journal of Eurasian Studies, 2011–Present; Journal of International Organizations Studies, 2011–Present; Journal of Central Asia and the Caucasus, 2005–Present; Oil, Gas and Energy Law, 2004–2008 Central Eurasian Studies Review, 2001–2007, and Founding Editor of its “Perspectives” section, 2002–2007; Electronic Journal of World Politics, 2000–2005; Cahiers d’études sur la Méditerranée orientale et le monde turco-iranien, 1998–2005; Turkistan-Newsletter, 1997–2008; Mershon International Studies Review, 1994–1999.
Manuscript, Book and Proposal Reviewer: American Political Science Review, Canadian Foreign Policy, Canadian Slavonic Studies, Central Eurasian Studies Review, Emergence: Complexity and Organization, Études internationales, Europe-Asia Studies, Foreign Policy Analysis, Global Environmental Politics, International Journal, International Journal of Global Energy Issues, International Journal of Regulation and Governance, International Studies Quarterly, Journal of Interdisciplinary History, Journal of International Organizations Studies, Nationalities Papers, Parliamentary Affairs, Perspectives on Global Development and Technology, Policy Studies Journal, Political Psychology, Revue canadienne de science politique, Russian History, Russian Review, Slavic Review, Soviet Union, Technology Review, Transnational Perspectives, Western Political Quarterly; Cambridge University Press, Emirates Centre for Strategic Studies and Research, Harper & Row, Routledge; Canada Foundation for Innovation, Social Science and Humanities Research Council (Canada).
8.2. Other Professional and Institutional Service
Member, Scientific Council, Observatory of the Black, Gulf and Mediterranean Seas, Paris, 2013–Present.
Member, Organizing Committee, International Conference Changing Patterns of Power in Historical and Modern Central and Inner Asia, Ulaanbaatar University, Mongolia, 2013–Present.
International House, Columbia University: McGuigan Fellowship Selection Committee, 2009–Present; McLaine Fellowship Selection Committee, 2009–Present.
Central Eurasian Studies Society: Executive Board, 2002–2005; Publications Committee, 2001–2010; Institutional Linkages Committee, 2002–2010 (and Chair, 2002–2006); Annual Conference Committee, 2006–2010.
International Studies Association: Canada Section, Executive Committee, 2006–2009.
Regional Expert, Self-Determination Project, Interhemispheric Resource Center and Institute for Policy Studies, Tucson and Washington, 2000–2002.
International Sociological Association, Research Group on Alienation Research: Executive Committee and Vice-President, 1998–2002.
American Political Science Association, Domestic Sources of Foreign Policy Section: Executive Committee and Chair, Awards Committee, 1998–2000.
Laval University: Centre québécois de relations internationales, Annual Colloquium Program Committee, Chair, 1988–1989; Faculty of Letters, Committee on the Interdisciplinary Concentration in Russian and Soviet Studies, 1989–1990; Department of Political Science, Library Committee, 1988–1991, and Committee Chair, 1994–1996.
Pennsylvania State University: Tenure Review Committee, External Referee, Autumn 1983.
The University of Michigan: Office of the President, Committee on Communications, Chair, 1978–1979; College of Literature, Science and the Arts, English Composition Board, Committee on the Upper-Division Writing Requirement, 1980–1981; Faculty Senate Advisory Committee on Academic Affairs, 1980–1981.
9. Languages and International Experience
9.1. Languages
English (mother tongue); French (excellent); Russian (very good); Dutch, German, Italian, Portuguese, and Spanish (proficient reading); Latin, Polish, and Romanian (some reading).
9.2. Countries of International Experience
Armenia, Austria, Azerbaijan, Belarus, Belgium, Canada, China, Czech Republic, Denmark, Finland, France, Georgia, Germany, Greece, Hungary, Iran, Italy, Kazakhstan, Lithuania, Luxembourg, Monaco, Mexico, Norway, Netherlands, Norway, Portugal, Romania, Russia, Singapore, Sweden, Switzerland, Turkey, Ukraine, United Kingdom, United States, Uzbekistan.
10. References
Available upon request.
11. Academic and Policy Publications
11.1. Monograph
Why Soviet Foreign Policy Failed: What Complexity Science Tells Us That Nothing Else Can (Litchfield Park, Ariz.: Emergent Publications, 2013).
11.2. Refereed Journal Articles
11.2.1. Scholarly articles under double-blind peer review
“International Parliamentary Institutions as Organizations,” Journal of International Organizations Studies 4:1 (Spring 2013), 104–126.
“Бакунин и психобиографы: Анархист как мифический и исторический объект,” Клио, 2010 (No. 2), 115–124. [English original: “Bakunin and the Psychobiographers: The Anarchist as Mythical and Historical Object” (PDF 225Kb).]
“U.S.–Russian Strategic-Military Relations in Central Asia,” Perspectives on Global Development and Technology 6:1–3 (2007), 109–125.
“The Paradox of Intentional Emergent Coherence: Organization and Decision in a Complex World,” Journal of the Washington Academy of Sciences 91:4 (Winter 2006), 9–27.
“The OSCE’s Parliamentary Diplomacy in Central Asia and the South Caucasus in Comparative Perspective,” Studia Diplomatica 59:2 (2006), 79–93.
“Transnational
Policies for Conflict Reduction and Prevention in the South
Caucasus,” Perspectives
on Global Development and Technology 2:3–4
(December 2003), 615–633.
Reprinted
in: Mehdi
Parvizi Amineh and Henk Houweling (eds.), Central
Eurasia in Global Politics: Conflict, Security, and Development
(Boston–Leiden: Brill, 2004), pp. 301–319.
“The European Parliament and the EU’s Security and Defence Policy,” European Security 12:2 (Summer 2003), 1–20. Principal co-author.
“Turkey
and the Geopolitics of Turkmenistan’s Natural Gas,”
Review of International Affairs
1:2 (Winter 2001), 20–33.
Reprinted
in: Oil,
Gas & Energy Law
3:2 (June 2005).
“The
Complex Evolution of International Orders and the Current
International Transition,”
InterJournal,
no. 255 (1999).
Reprinted
in: Ali Minai
and Yaneer Bar-Yam (eds.), Unifying
Themes in Complex Systems,
vol. 2 (New York: Perseus Press, 2004), pp. 515–522.
“An Unpublished Source on Bakunin in 1861,” Canadian Slavonic Studies 35:1–2 (March–June 1993), 121–130.
“An Unpublished Letter from M.A. Bakunin to R. Solger,” International Review of Social History 33:2 (1988), 212–217.
“The Political Economy of East–South Military Transfers,” International Studies Quarterly 31, no. 3 (September 1987): 273–299. Principal co-author.
“Domestic and Foreign Influences on Policy Making: The Soviet Union in the 1974 Cyprus Conflict,” Soviet Studies 37:1 (January 1985), 60–89.
“Economic Issues in East–South Relations,” Problems of Communism 33:4 (July–August 1984), 73–80.
“East–South Relations at UNCTAD: Global Political Economy and the CMEA,” International Organization 37:1 (Winter 1983), 121–142.
“The Formation of Soviet Foreign Policy: Organizational and Cognitive Perspectives,” World Politics 34:3 (April 1982), 418–436.
“Soviet
Dissent under Khrushchev: An Analytical Study,”
Comparative Politics
13:1 (October
1980), 15–35.
Reprinted,
in large part, in:
Alastair Kocho-Williams (ed.), The
Twentieth Century Russia Reader (London:
Routledge, 2011), pp. 237–252; but missing the correct
key prediction about
the fate of the Soviet Union after L.I. Brezhnev’s death
(1982).
11.2.2. Policy-academic articles under double-blind peer review
“Policy Options for Resolving Post-Soviet Ethnic Conflict,” Central Asian Survey 19:3–4 (September/December 2000), 451–468.
“Cooperative Energy Security in the Caspian Region: A New Paradigm for Sustainable Development?”, Global Governance 5:2 (April–June 1999), 251–271.
“Towards
Cooperative Energy Security in the South Caucasus,”
Caucasian Regional Studies 1:1 (1996), 71–81.
Russian
translation:
“О
совеместной
энергетической
безопасности
в Южном Кавказе,”
Кавказские
региональные
исследования
1:1 (1996), 69–80.
“Harmonizing
EEC–CMEA Relations: Never the Twain Shall Meet?”,
International Affairs (London) 63:2 (Spring 1987), 259-270.
Reprinted in:
Paul F. Diehl (ed.), The
Politics of International Organizations
(Chicago: Dorsey, 1989), pp. 365–381.
11.2.3. Other refereed journal articles
“Turco-Caspian Energy Security and the Caucasus:
Threats and Opportunities,” Caucasus
International
Journal, 2:3 (Autumn 2012), 45–56.
Reprinted
in: The
Geopolitical Scene of the Caucasus: A Decade of Perspectives,
edited by D.N. Göksel and Z. Shiriyev (Istanbul: Toplumsal
Katılım ve Gelişim Vak, 2013), pp. 339–351.
“Azerbaijan’s Place in Euro-Caspian Energy
Security,” Azerbaijan Focus
(October–December
2010): 85–98.
Revised and
expanded version in:
South Caucasus 2021:
Oil, Democracy and Geopolitics,
edited by G.E. Howard and F. Ismailzade (London:
Routledge, 2012), pp. 107–130.
“Recent Developments in Cooperative Energy Security,” Oil, Gas & Energy Law 5:4 (November 2007).
“Current Problems of
Global Energy Security in Light of the Caspian Sea Regions Recent
Experience”
[PDF,
142Kb],
Oil, Gas &
Energy Law
4:1 (May 2006).
Reprinted
in:
Sukhvinder Kaur Multani (ed.), Global
Energy Security: Issues and Country Perspectives
(Bangalore: ICFAI University Press, 2008), pp. 188–198.
“The Caspian Energy Conundrum,” Journal of International Affairs 56:2 (Spring 2003), 89–102.
“Economics
and Security in Central Asia,”
Harvard Asia
Quarterly 5:1 (Winter 2001), 4–12.
Reprinted
in:
[Maria
O. Pryshlak (ed.)], Issues
in Central Asian Diplomacy[: Handbook
Produced
for the Diplomats of the Foreign Ministry of Tajikistan]
(Washington, D.C.: Georgetown University, Center for
Intercultural Education and Development, 2006).
“Казахстан и международное энергетическое развитие” [Kazakhstan and International Energy Development, PDF 662Kb], Энергия Казахстана 2:7 (December 1999), 48–56.
“Housing the Orphans of European Security: How to Bring Belarus, Ukraine, and Moldova in from the Cold,” Euro-Atlantic Forum 1:2 (Spring 1998).
“A Strategy for Cooperative Energy Security,” Caspian Crossroads 3:1 (Summer 1997), 23–29.
“Bringing
the National Interest Back In: Lessons for Neorealism from the Former
Soviet Area,” Cosmos:
The Hellenic Yearbook of International Relations
1 (1995), 61–89.
Reprinted in:
S. Brown, R.M. Cutler, M. Evangelista, R. Gilpin, J.D. Grieco,
P. Ifestos, and S.D. Krasner, International
Relations Theory at a Crossroads
(New York: Caratzas, 1996).
“Les mutations soviétiques: analyses et politiques occidentales,” Études internationales 21:1 (March 1990), 153–164.
“Decision Making and International Relations: The Cybernetic Theory Reconsidered,” Michigan Journal of Political Science 1:2 (Fall 1981), 57–63.
11.3. Refereed Encyclopædia Articles
“Bakunin, Mikhail Aleksandrovich,” in The New Encyclopedia of Unbelief, ed. Thomas Flynn (Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus Books, 2007), 103–4.
“Complexity Science and Knowledge-Creation in International Relations Theory,” in Institutional and Infrastructural Resources, in Encyclopedia of Life Support Systems (Oxford: EOLSS for UNESCO, 2003).
Multiple short entries in R.J. Barry Jones (ed.), Encyclopædia of International Political Economy (London: Routledge, 2001).
11.4. Edited Books
La politique étrangère soviétique à l’aube des années 90 (Québec: Centre québécois de relations internationales, 1990).
Mikhail Bakunin: From Out of the Dustbin; Bakunin’s
Basic Writings, 1869–1871,
translated and edited and introduced
by Robert M. Cutler (Ann Arbor, Mich.:
Ardis Publishers,
1985).
Reprinted
as: The
Basic Bakunin, Great
Books in Philosophy Series (Amherst, N.Y.: Prometheus
Books, 1992). Excerpts
reprinted
at:
pp.
86–87,
95–96,
220–224,
in
Robert
Graham (ed.),
Anarchism:
A Documentary History of Libertarian Ideas,
vol. 1, From
Anarchy to Anarchism
(300CE to 1939)
(Montreal–New
York–London:
Black Rose Books, 2005).
11.5. Contributions To Edited Books
11.5.1. Refereed contributions to edited books
“The Central Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex: From Central Asia to Central Europe,” in M. Parvizi Amineh (ed.), Secure Oil and Alternative Energy: The Geopolitics of Energy Paths of China and the European Union (Leiden–Boston: Brill, 2012), pp. 41–74.
“The Application of the Theory of Transfinite Numbers to International Conflict Analysis,” in Ionut Purica (ed.), Nonlinear Approaches to Crisis and Conflict (Bucharest: Expert, 2011), pp. 322–353.
“Russia’s Emerging Place in the Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex,” in M. Parvizi Amineh and Yang Guang (eds.), The Globalization of Energy: China and the European Union (Leiden–Boston: Brill, 2010), pp. 71–100.
“Recent Developments in the Structuration of the Central Asian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex," in Christopher Len and Alvin Chew (eds.), Asian Energy and Security Challenges (Stockholm: Institute for Security and Development Policy, 2009), pp. 61–82.
“De-authoritarization in Uzbekistan?: Analysis and Prospects,” in Irina Morozova (ed.), Towards Social Stability and Democratic Governance in Central Eurasia: Challenges to Regional Security, NATO Science Series 49 (Amsterdam: IOS Press, 2005), pp. 120–141.
“The Sources and Regions of Crisis in the
Caucasus,” in N. Resat Ödün (ed.), Examination
of the Regions of Crisis from the Perspectives of Turkey, NATO and
the European Union, and Their Impacts on the Security of Turkey
(Ankara: Turkish General Staff Printing House, 2004), pp. 105–126.
Turkish
translation:
“Kafkasya’daki
Kriz Kaynakları ve Bölgeleri”
[PDF,
192Kb],
in
N. Resat Ödün (ed.), Türkiye,
Nato ve Avrupa
Birliği Perspektifinden Kriz Bölgelerinin İncelenmesi
ve Türkiye’nin Güvenliğine Etkileri (Ankara:
Genelkurmay
Basim Evi,
2004), pp. 105–126.
“Central Asia and the West after September 11,” in Hall Gardner (ed.), NATO and the European Union: New World, New Europe, New Threats (London: Ashgate, 2004), pp. 219–231.
“The
Emergence of International Parliamentary Institutions: New Networks
of Influence in World Society,” in Gordon S. Smith and
Daniel Wolfish (eds.), Who Is Afraid of the State?: Canada in a
World of Multiple Centres of Power (Toronto: University of
Toronto Press, 2001), pp. 201–229.
French
translation:
“L’émergence
des institutions parlementaires internationales: De nouveaux
réseaux d’influence
dans la société mondiale,” in Gordon Smith et
Daniel Wolfish (éds.), Qui
a peur de l’État?:
Le Canada dans un monde aux structures polycentriques de pouvoir
(Montréal: Presses de l’Université
de Montréal, 2001), pp. 213–241.
“Gorbachev as CEO Roadkill: How the Soviet Foreign Policy Establishment Failed to Manage Complexity,” in Michael R. Lissack and Hugh P. Gunz (eds.), Managing the Complex (New York: Quorum, 1999), pp. 352–370.
“International Relations Theory and Soviet Conduct toward the Multilateral Global-Economic Institutions: GATT, IMF and the World Bank,” in Deborah A. Palmieri (ed.), The USSR and the World Economy (New York: Praeger, 1992), pp. 105–135.
“[Russian and] Soviet Policy toward Greece and Turkey: A Systems Perspective,” in Dimitri C. Constas (ed.), The Greek-Turkish Conflict in the 1990s (London: Macmillan, 1991), pp. 183–206.
“La ‘doctrine Reagan’ et la guerre afghane,” in Cutler (ed.), La politique étrangère américaine de 1980 à 1988 (Québec: Centre québécois de relations internationales, 1989), pp. 71–84.
“[Russia’s Historical Alliance Behavior:] The Soviet Union and World Order,” in Wolfram F. Hanrieder (ed.), Global Peace and Security (Boulder, Colo.: Westview, 1987), pp. 76–100.
“Unifying Cognitive-Map and Operational-Code Approaches: A Theoretical Framework and an Empirical Example,” in Christer Jönsson (ed.), Cognitive Dynamics and International Politics (London: Frances Pinter, 1982), pp. 91–121.
“The View from the Urals: West European Integration in Soviet Perspective,” in Werner J. Feld (ed.), Western Europe’s Global Reach (New York: Pergamon, 1980), pp. 80–109.
11.5.2. Other contributions to edited books
“The Sources of Kazakhstani Conduct,” in Michael Gervers and Wayne Schlepp (eds.), Populations, Cultures and Diplomacy, Toronto Studies in Central and Inner Asia no. 5 (Toronto: University of Toronto, Joint Centre for Asia and Pacific Studies, 2002), pp. 63–76.
“U.S. Interests and ‘Cooperative Security’ in Abkhazia and Karabakh: Engagement versus Commitment?”, in Mehmet Tütüncü (ed.) The Caucasian Knot: Ethnic Conflicts in the Caucasus (Haarlem: S.O.T.A. Research Centre, 1998), pp. 132–144.
“The Contribution of the European Union, Its Institutions, and Its Members to Co-operative Security for the Soviet Successor States,” in European Commission (ed.), Federalism and Subsidiarity in External Relations (Brussels: European Community Studies Association, 1994).
“L’environnement diplomatique multilatérale et la ‘nouvelle pensée politique’ de Gorbatchev,” in Cutler (ed.), La politique étrangère soviétique à l’aube des années 90, pp. 9–24.
“Introduction,” in Cutler (ed.), Mikhail Bakunin [above, 1985], pp. 15–29.
“Trade, Aid, and International Relations,” in Paul E. Lydolph, Geography of the USSR: Topical Analysis (Elkhart Lake, Wisc.: Misty Valley Publishing, 1979), pp. 479–510. Co-author.
11.6. Briefing Book, Selected Rapporteur’s and Expert Reports
Expert Affadavits concerning human rights and political situations mainly in countries of Central Asia, prepared for submission in conjunction with cases before the Immigration Appeals Courts in the U.S. Department of Justice, 2002–Present. Average length, 7 pp.
Kazakhstan’s “Resource Nationalism”: Its Sources and Motives, Economic Papers 2 (Washington, D.C.: George Washington University, Elliott School, Central Asia Program, September 2012). 6 pp.
“Eurasian Expansion,” World Pipelines 10:2 (2010), 10–15.
“The Future of European Energy,” Briefing Paper for the CSIS Workshop. Dubai: Global Dialogue on Natural Resources, April 2006. 8 pp. [Sound recording of conference presentation.]
PGA Strategic Review and Planning Document. New York: Parliamentarians for Global Action, October 2005. Rapporteur, Strategic Review and Planning Retreat Weekend for Organizational Renewal. 7 pp.
“Country Paper: Canada,” Briefing Paper for the Working Group on Energy Cooperation. Brussels: EastWest Institute, September 2005. 9 pp.
A Parliamentary Assembly for the International Criminal Court? Options and Issues Paper. New York: Parliamentarians for Global Action, September 2003. Co-author. 12 pp.
“Self-Determination Issues in Central Eurasia,” Foreign Policy in Focus, Special Report 18 (May 2002), 1–6.
New Silk Road: Briefing Book on Azerbaijan, Georgia, Turkmenistan, and Uzbekistan. New York: EastWest Institute, 1999. 38 pp.
Financing Eurasian Energy for the 21st Century: The U.S. Strategic Perspective on Caspian Energy; Conclusion, Including Regional Geopolitical Views. New York: Institute for EastWest Studies, July 1998. Rapporteur, Second EastWest Leaders’ Forum. 5 pp.
11.7. Selected Working Papers
“Development of the European Neighbourhood Program in the South Caucasus: An Instance of Incipient Organizational Learning,” Global Europe Papers 2008/4 (Department of European Studies, University of Bath). 12 pp.
“Press Reform and Foreign Policy in Soviet Politics,” Cahier 91–05 (Laboratoire d’études politiques et administratives, Université Laval, 1991). 36 pp.
“East-South Relations in Global Perspective,” Cahier 89–05 (Laboratoire d’études politiques et administratives, Université Laval, 1989). 16 pp.
“Harmonizing EEC–CMEA Relations,” Working Paper 57 (Center for International and Strategic Affairs, University of California at Los Angeles, January 1987). 31 pp.
11.8. Selected Speeches and Interviews
11.8.1. Selected speeches
“The New Concept of Cooperative Energy Security” [PDF, 148KB], Oil, Gas & Energy Law 5:4 (November 2007).
“Amerika Birleşik Devletleri’nde Orta Avrasya Araştırmaları,” in Türkoloji ve Türk Tarihi Araştirmalari, vol. 1, Siyaset/Dil ve Edebiyat/Kültür (Ankara: Yeni Türkiye, 2002), pp. 30–32. [English original, “Central Eurasian Studies in the United States”.]
“Finance Issues in Eurasian Energy Development,” in Caspian Oil and Gas Resources: Transport Routes, Security and Economic Development; Second International Conference, November 7–8, 1998 (Tehran: Institute for International Energy Studies, 1999), pp. 68–71.
11.8.2. Selected press interviews
“‘Russia Wants to Keep Europe as Its Own Energy Hunting Ground’,” Euro-Atlantic Quarterly, 17 October 2012.
“Difficult Challenges Ahead for China and India,” QFinance: The Ultimate Resource, revised 2nd ed. (London: Bloomsbury Information, 2010), 136–138.
“[Interviu cu] Dr. Robert M. Cutler: Q&A,” Petroleum Industry Review (Ploiesti, Romania), 2010 (July), 73–75. [English original, ibid., 76–78.]
Mihály Szalontay, “Orosz–török hatalmi játszmák: Exkluzív interjú; Nem bukott el a Nabucco vezeték,” Magyar Hírlap, 5 July 2010.
“Nekünk Azerbajdzsán kell,” index (Budapest), 22 June 2010.
László Gábor, “Új antant körvonalazódik Ankara és Moszkva között,” Magyar Nemzet, 21 June 2010.
“Intervista a Robert Cutler: Gas, Russia, Caspio e UE,” ECESA Energy Newsletter, no. 1 (May 2010), 7. [English original here. Spanish translation: Also published by ECESA.]
“Robert Katler: «Rusiya ilə Ukrayna arasındakı münasibətlər Avropanı Azərbaycanla enerji sahəsində əməkdaşlığa daha çox diqqət ayırmasına sövq edir»,” Səs İnformasiya Agentliy (Baku), 30 September 2009.
“Azərbaycan müstəqil enerji diplomatiyası yürüdür,” Yeni Azərbaycan (Baku), 30 September 2009.
“Azerbaijan Has a Key Role to Play in Nabucco Project,” Today (Baku), 16 September 2009. [Russian translation: Simultaneously published by Day (Baku).]
Ferhad Mohammed, “The Kurds and the Constitutional Crisis in Iraq”, Gulan (Irbil), no. 731 (31 July 2009). [Originally published in Kurdish translation.]
Мавлян Юлдашев, “Р. Катлер: ‘Политическая элита США всегда признавала значение Узбекистана для Центральной Азии и Евразии’,” ЦентрАзия (Toshkent and Moscow), 23 April 2008.
Ferhad Mohammed, “Iraqi Kurdistan and the Situation in Iraq”, Gulan (Irbil), no. 629 (9 April 2007). [Originally published in Kurdish translation.]
11.9. Selected Notes and Correspondence
“What China Wants from Canada,” Embassy: Canada’s Foreign Policy Newsweekly (Ottawa), 6 February 2013, p. 3.
“The Central Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex,” IIAS Newsletter (Leiden), no. 62 (Winter 2012), p. 24–25.
“Russia’s Emerging Place: The Eurasian Hydrocarbon Energy Complex,” IIAS Newsletter (Leiden), no. 51 (Summer 2009), p. 22.
“Cooperative Energy Security for Sustainable Development,” Policy Innovations (Carnegie Council for Ethics in International Affairs), 4 January 2008.
“The Geo-economics of Central Asian Energy,” Spotlight on Asia’s Energy and Security Challenges (Singapore: S. Rajaratnam School of International Studies, 2007), p. 5.
“The OSCE’s Parliamentary Diplomacy in Central Asia and the South Caucasus in Comparative Perspective,” NIASnytt–Asia Insights (Oslo), 2004, No. 2 (June), 8–9.
“The Complexity of Central Eurasia,” Central Eurasian Studies Review 3:1 (Winter 2004), 2–3.
“U.S. Intervention in Afghanistan: Implications for Central Asia,” Global Affairs Commentary, Foreign Policy in Focus, 21 November 2001, pp. 1–2.
“Islamic Militancy in Central Asia: What Is To Be Done? [in two parts],” Foreign Policy in Focus, March 2001, pp. 1–2; 19 October 2001, pp. 1–2.
“The Anti-Terrorist Coalition: A ‘New World Order’ Redux?” Foreign Policy in Focus, 25 October 2001, pp. 1–2.
“What Bin Laden and Global Warming Have in Common,” Foreign Policy in Focus, 27 September 2001, pp. 1–2.
“The Slovenia Summit: Bush Meets Putin,” Foreign Policy in Focus, 1 June 2001, pp. 1–2.
“U.S. Policy Must Be Sensitive to Ukraine’s Balancing Act,” Foreign Policy in Focus, 1 January 2001, pp. 1–2.
“A First Glance at the New [U.S.] Administration’s Policy Toward Russia,” Foreign Policy in Focus, December 2000, pp. 1–2.
“Москва
рискует оказаться
изолированной
от Кавказа”
[Moscow Risks Finding Itself Isolated from the Caucasus], Независимая
газета,
16 January 1998, p. 7.
Abridged and edited English translation:
“Russia’s Dilemma in the Caucasus: Power Politics vs.
Energy Cooperation,” Analysis
of Current Events
10,
no. 2 (February 1998). pp. 10–11.
“Integration Within and Without the CIS,” Analysis of Current Events 9:3 (March 1997), pp. 3, 6.
“The West’s Irreducible Interests in Central Asia: Energy Security and Nuclear Nonproliferation,” Focus (Washington. D.C.) 3:11 (November 1996), pp. 1–2.
“Ni démocratie ni totalitarisme,” L’Analyste (Québec), no. 31 (Autumn 1990), pp. 35–37.
“The Soviets’ New International Stance,” Sunday Los Angeles Times, 20 March 1988, Pt. V (Opinion Section), pp. 2, 6.
“Can Soviet Society Live with Democracy?” Sunday Los Angeles Times, 1 February 1987, Pt. V (Opinion Section), pp. 2, 6.
“International Treaties vs. Private Enterprise: Is Alarm Justified?” Christian Science Monitor, 8 February 1984, pp. 18-19.
“Current Trends in Soviet Research on Western Europe,” European Studies Newsletter 13:3 (December 1983), 10–12.
“Editorial Correspondence,” Comparative Politics 13:2 (July 1981), 497–498.
“East-South Economic Relations,” Transnational Perspectives (Geneva), 8:2 (Summer 1981), 14–16.
11.10. Book Reviews
Nearly two dozen book reviews in over a dozen journals. List and some reprints available at <http://carleton-ca.academia.edu/RobertMCutler/Book-Reviews>.
12. Situational Analyses and Analytical Journalism
Hundreds of articles in Asia Times Online, Central Asia – Caucasus Analyst, FSU Oil & Gas Monitor, ISN Security Watch, and similar publications.
Dr.
Robert M. Cutler
http://www.robertcutler.org/download/pdf/Cutler-Robert-M.academic-cv.pdf,
page