Yr Athro Sergey Radchenko
Professor of International Relations
- 0.14, 65-68 Park Place
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Sergey Radchenko has an international reputation for research on the history of the Cold War. He has written on Sino-Soviet and Soviet-Japanese relations, atomic diplomacy, Soviet engagement with the Third World, and on Cold War crises. In addition he has published work on Mongolian and North Korean history and continues to have interests the international politics of Central Asia and in contemporary Sino-Russian relations. He is a Global Fellow in the History and Public Policy of the Wilson Centre Program, working on China’s Foreign Policy Under Mao Zedong and Zi Jiang Distinguished Professor at East China Normal University. Currently his research interests concentrate on China’s foreign policy during the Cold War and on China’s political history since 1949 and on the global history of the Cold War.
Cyhoeddiadau
2020
- Radchenko, S. 2020. ‘Nothing but humiliation for Russia’: Moscow and NATO’s eastern enlargement, 1993-1995. Journal of Strategic Studies 43(6-7), pp. 769-815. (10.1080/01402390.2020.1820331)
2019
- Radchenko, S. 2019. The Sino-Russian relationship in the mirror of the Cold War. China International Strategy Review 1, pp. 269-282. (10.1007/s42533-019-00030-x)
2018
- Craig, C. and Radchenko, S. 2018. MAD, not Marx: Khrushchev and the nuclear revolution. Journal of Strategic Studies 41(1-2), pp. 208-233. (10.1080/01402390.2017.1330683)
2017
- Rozman, G. and Radchenko, S. eds. 2017. International relations and Asia's Northern Tier: Sino-Russia relations, North Korea, and Mongolia. Asan-Palgrave Macmillan Series. Palgrave. (10.1007/978-981-10-3144-1)
- Radchenko, S. and Jargalsaikhan, M. 2017. Mongolia in the 2016-17 electoral cycle: the blessings of patronage. Asian Survey 57(6), pp. 1032-1057. (10.1525/AS.2017.57.6.1032)
- Radchenko, S. 2017. The rise and fall of the Sino-Soviet alliance 1949-1989. In: Naimark, N., Pons, S. and Quinn-Judge, S. eds. The Cambridge History of Communism. Volume 2: The Socialist Camp and World Power 1941–1960s., Vol. 2. The Cambridge History of Communism Cambridge: Cambridge University Press, pp. 243-268., (10.1017/9781316459850.011)
- Radchenko, S. 2017. Turkmenistan: Grasping for legitimacy. Journal of Democracy 28(3), pp. 168-172. (10.1353/jod.2017.0054)
- Radchenko, S. 2017. Untrusting and untrusted: Mao's China at a crossroads, 1969. In: Klimke, M., Kreis, R. and Ostermann, C. F. eds. Trust, but Verify: the Politics of Uncertainty and the Transformation of the Cold War Order, 1969-1991. Cold War International History Project Series Washington, D.C.; Stanford, California: Woodrow Wilson Center Press; Stanford University Press, pp. 17-41., (10.11126/stanford/9780804798099.003.0002)
- Radchenko, S. 2017. Lost chance for peace: The 1945 CCP-Kuomintang peace talks revisited. Journal of Cold War Studies 19(2), pp. 84-114. (10.1162/JCWS_a_00742)
- Radchenko, S. 2017. 'Red on white': Kim Il Sung, Park Chung Hee, and the failure of Korea's Reunification, 1971-1973. Cold War History 17(3), pp. 259-277. (10.1080/14682745.2016.1265508)
2016
- Radchenko, S. 2016. The Soviet Union and the Cold War arms race. In: Mahnken, T., Maiolo, J. and Stevenson, D. eds. Arms Races in International Politics: From the 19th to the 21st Century. Oxford: Oxford University Press, pp. 158-175., (DOI:10.1093/acprof:oso/9780198735267.003.0008)
2015
- Radchenko, S. 2015. Gorbachev in Europe and Asia. In: Luthi, L. M. ed. The Regional Cold Wars in Europe, East Asia, and the Middle East: Crucial Periods and Turning Points. Cold War International History Project Series Washington, D.C.: Woodrow Wilson Centre Press with Stanford University Press, pp. 274-294.
2008
- Craig, C. and Radchenko, S. 2008. The atomic bomb and the origins of the cold war. U.S.: Yale University Press.
Addysgu
Sergey Radchenko's areas of PhD supervision include: Cold War History, Sino-Russian relations, China's and Russia's foreign policies.