Caucasus Edition: Journal of Conflict Transformation, cilt.7, sa.1, ss.71-109, 2016 (Hakemli Dergi)
The past two and a half decades in the South Caucasus leave little hope to
entertain for the eventual integration of the region. The different integrational
processes and transnational alliances that the South Caucasus countries have
engaged in surely contribute to the creation of new spaces for cooperation, but
also to the perpetuation of the conflicts in the region. In fact, often conflicts have
been defining the design and implementation of these transnational alliances
and integrational processes. With this reality, regional transnational integration
as an avenue for conflict resolution seems to be part of a vicious circle since
conflict resolution is often seen as a precondition for regional integration.
This paper aims to explore economic options for inserting a wedge in this
vicious circle. Convinced that regional economic cooperation could be an
important step towards conflict transformation in the South Caucasus, this
paper suggests that the prospects of such integration be considered. Be it in the
form of exploring opportunities in the different integrational paths that the
countries of the South Caucasus have taken or challenging the isolationist
economic policies that have outlived their goals and utility, this paper offers all
stakeholders to look at economic cooperation with rather than against each other
as the option that could lead to the resolution of conflicts in the region.