Polish-Russian relations after 10 April 2010

Polish-Russian relations are an extremely dynamic and changeable phenomenon, especially after Poland’s accession to NATO. Despite the fact that the Russian Federation was established only in 1991, the relations discussed in this article have also been influenced by the relations between Poland and t...

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Main Author: Daria Janke
Format: Article
Language:English
Published: University of Gdansk 2020-03-01
Series:Journal of Geography, Politics and Society
Subjects:
Online Access:https://czasopisma.bg.ug.edu.pl/index.php/JGPS/article/view/4405/3695
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author Daria Janke
author_facet Daria Janke
author_sort Daria Janke
collection DOAJ
description Polish-Russian relations are an extremely dynamic and changeable phenomenon, especially after Poland’s accession to NATO. Despite the fact that the Russian Federation was established only in 1991, the relations discussed in this article have also been influenced by the relations between Poland and the Soviet Union, whose successor was Russia. The aim of this study is to analyse changes in the Polish-Russian relations after 2010. Not only does the paper present the causes of conflicts that have influenced mutual relations, but it also indicates areas that need changing and that may contribute to the warming of relations between Warsaw and Moscow. The method of comparative analysis was applied in the study. The conducted analysis allows stating a significant impact of the Smolensk disaster on the Polish-Russian relations.
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spelling doaj.art-c170a417506d47ef8282b56b554d7f3f2022-12-22T04:17:19ZengUniversity of GdanskJournal of Geography, Politics and Society2451-22492020-03-01101424910.26881/jpgs.2020.1.06Polish-Russian relations after 10 April 2010 Daria Janke 0University of Gdańsk Polish-Russian relations are an extremely dynamic and changeable phenomenon, especially after Poland’s accession to NATO. Despite the fact that the Russian Federation was established only in 1991, the relations discussed in this article have also been influenced by the relations between Poland and the Soviet Union, whose successor was Russia. The aim of this study is to analyse changes in the Polish-Russian relations after 2010. Not only does the paper present the causes of conflicts that have influenced mutual relations, but it also indicates areas that need changing and that may contribute to the warming of relations between Warsaw and Moscow. The method of comparative analysis was applied in the study. The conducted analysis allows stating a significant impact of the Smolensk disaster on the Polish-Russian relations.https://czasopisma.bg.ug.edu.pl/index.php/JGPS/article/view/4405/3695foreign policyhistorical policypolandpolish-russian relationsrussiasmolensk disaster
spellingShingle Daria Janke
Polish-Russian relations after 10 April 2010
Journal of Geography, Politics and Society
foreign policy
historical policy
poland
polish-russian relations
russia
smolensk disaster
title Polish-Russian relations after 10 April 2010
title_full Polish-Russian relations after 10 April 2010
title_fullStr Polish-Russian relations after 10 April 2010
title_full_unstemmed Polish-Russian relations after 10 April 2010
title_short Polish-Russian relations after 10 April 2010
title_sort polish russian relations after 10 april 2010
topic foreign policy
historical policy
poland
polish-russian relations
russia
smolensk disaster
url https://czasopisma.bg.ug.edu.pl/index.php/JGPS/article/view/4405/3695
work_keys_str_mv AT dariajanke polishrussianrelationsafter10april2010