The book offers a comprehensive analysis of the Greek-Turkish maritime dispute, exploring key issues such as territorial waters, national airspace, and exclusive economic zones. It delves into international law, treaties, and historical context to provide insights into legal precedents worldwide. Covering the evolution of tensions from 1973 to 2022, it also addresses contemporary challenges posed by green energy geopolitics and the climate crisis, proposing a new framework for coexistence in the Aegean Sea that the author considers crucial for future relations.
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- 2022
- 2021
Focusing on the Cold War era, this book explores the diplomatic efforts between Greece and Eastern Europe, encapsulated in the term "Ostpolitik," meaning "Opening to the East." It utilizes primary sources from various nations, including Greece, Eastern European states, and key Western allies, to analyze the historical context and foreign policy dynamics of this complex period in the Eastern Mediterranean. The work sheds light on the intricate relationships and geopolitical strategies that shaped regional interactions during a time of tension and transformation.
- 2017
Conflict & Prosperity: Geopolitics and Energy in the Eastern Mediterranean
- 230 pages
- 9 hours of reading
The eastern part of the Mediterranean is witnessing some of the most intriguing, and dangerous events in today’s world. It features weak or collapsed states, direct and proxy wars, and a confluence of great power stakes. In recent years a new and significant element has been added to the region’s troubled search for the discovery of substantial treasures of offshore energy. These energy discoveries are widely recognized as a game-changer. This volume investigates the extent of this change and the range of its implications. The Eastern Mediterranean has historically been a meeting point of east and west, of the economic north and south and of three major world Christianity, Islam and Judaism. However, this volume proposes to view the Eastern Mediterranean as a separate “new” region, and not as a mere extension of neighboring continents or even of the Middle East. This analytical frame stands at the center of the book.