Facultatea de Relaţii Internaţionale, Ştiinţe Politice şi Administrative / Facultyof International Relations, Political and Administrative Sciences
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Item IDENTIFICATIONS CONCEPTUELLES DE L’INTERACTION „POLITIQUE ÉTRANGÈRE – INTÉRÊT NATIONAL – PROCESSUS INTÉGRATIONNISTE”(2018) Cebotari, Svetlana; Cotilevici, VioletaIn the contemporary world, the integration is one of the primary factors of the foreign policy and of the international relations as a whole. At the beginning of the 21st century the world is going through a multitude of processes that take place inside and outside the states. New integrationist groups appear, the organizational forms are diversified and the evolution takes place from simplistic models to more complex ones. As a result, the integrationist processes en-compassed virtually all regions and states, thus contributing to the formation of new international "matrices". This article analyzes the relationship «national interest - foreign policy - integrationist process". Between the notions of "integrationist process" and "national interest", "foreign policy" there is a complementarity report, each one completing one ano-ther. No integration process can be achieved outside and without the involvement of the states, which have a certain interest, which they achieve through the foreign policy.Item THE EVOLUTION OF REPUBLIC OF MOLDOVA RELATIONS WITH ROMANIA (1991–2013)(CEP USM, 2014) Cebotari, Svetlana; Ejova, CristinaIn this article the authors comprehensively analyze the evolution of the bilateral relations between Romania and Moldova. Relations between Romania and Moldova, two sovereig n and independent states, have a privileged, particular character, deriving from the community of people, culture, language and national history. Th currently existence of the two separate Romanian states instead of one as a whole, can be explained by the politicl history of the twentieth century, through the international situation that has been created both after the USSR collapse and the socialist camp, and by interests of modern great powers