Gruzja po rewolucji róż
View/ Open
Author:
Kłaczyński, Robert
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-citation: Annales Academiae Paedagogicae Cracoviensis. 46, Studia Politologica 3 (2007), s. [215]-226
xmlui.dri2xhtml.METS-1.0.item-iso: pl
Date: 2007
Metadata
Show full item recordAbstract
This article discusses the main aspects of the situation which emerged in the Georgian state
after the Revolution of Roses (2004). The first thing to consider is the geopolitical site of this
state that provides an opportunity to accomplish the Georgian political purposes not only in the
field of firm independence but also in the range of the construction of stable development bases.
The paradox is that this specific geopolitical site might pose a threat to the state, too. Georgia
is a very important European country. That is why it is quite possible that in the nearest future
same safety transport routes will pass troughs its territory. They will be used to dispatch commodity
as well as to transmit materials of the utmost importance, like petroleum and natural
gas. Apart from that, the past, the present and the future of Georgia is closely connected with the
role of Russia on the stage of the world politics. The greater the role of the Russian Federation
is in the world, the more possible is the subordination of Georgia by its huge neighbor. In this
article, particular emphasis was placed on the relationship between Moscow and Tbilisi. Moreover,
the text was divided into some parts with the purpose of careful examination of the situation
in Georgia after the Revolution of Roses. It is also worth mentioning that description of the
situation of this trans-Caucasian state has been performed in the area of both its domestic and
foreign politics, and also economic problems. Finally, the article is concluded with an analysis
of the evolution prospects of the situation in–and around – this trans-Caucasian republic.