URN:NBN:fi:tsv-oa8495
DOI: 10.11143/8495
Something old, new, borrowed, and blue: towards a bottom-up
agenda of the Finnish-Russian relations
JUSSI LAINE
Laine, Jussi (2014). Something old, new, borrowed, and blue: towards a bottom-
up agenda of the Finnish-Russian relations. Fennia 192: 1, pp. 65–78. ISSN
1798-5617.
While the Finnish-Russian relations of today cannot be fully understood without
understanding the past, it is equally important to know how to break away from
it. When discussing cross-border interaction, one must be aware of the broader
context within which these processes take place. The territorial sovereignty of
the nation-state continues to form one of the leading principles upon which in-
ternational relations are based, yet transnational relations are increasingly run
by actors and organisations whose ability to function does not stop at the border.
The Finnish-Russian border provides an illuminating laboratory in which to
study border change. This article draws on the experience from this border
where cross-border cooperation has reflected both the political and socio-cul-
tural change as well as politically and economically motivated interaction. It
argues that the best way to normalise neighbourly relations is through increased
people-to-people interaction, and preferable this ought to occur from the bot-
tom-up, not from the top-down. Civil society organisations themselves may
need to take matters into their own hands and to seek further revenues through
social entrepreneurship in order to ensure the continuity of cooperation. Much
of the work is carried out heedless of individual project and programme frames.
In practice, its success depends on individual actors who are able to shoulder
the implementation of the agreed programs and to solve emerging problems and
disagreements.
Keywords: Finland, Russia, European Union, border, civil society, interaction
Jussi Laine, Karelian Institute, University of Eastern Finland, P.O. Box 111 FI-
80101 Joensuu, Finland, E-mail: jussi.laine@uef.fi
Introduction
On the face of it, the significance of Finland’s
borders appears unaffected. The border with Rus-
sia remains secure and well controlled; younger
generations can hardly remember that there
would have ever been a ‘real’ border with Swe-
den, and even fewer recall that Finland shares
some 730 km of borderline with Norway some-
where up north. Running through nothing but for-
est and some occasional lakes for almost its en-
tire length, the Finnish-Russian border does not
inevitably appear to be a pressing research ob-
ject, at first glance. In terms of dynamics, it fades
in comparison with other European Union (EU)
borders as well as with other seemingly asym-
metrical borders, such as the border between the
United States and Mexico.
Given what was stated above, the scholarly and
popular attention the Finnish-Russian border has
attracted, and continues to attract, is astonishing.
Even though many of these writings discuss not the
border per se but what lies beyond it, it is the bor-
der that has gained a sizable symbolic load. The
lengthy shared border with Russia is still common-
ly put forth as excuse for why various issues are as
they are and not necessarily as they could or
should be. Everybody, even those who have never
seen or crossed it, seem to know the meaning of it
and what it stands for, and thus many statements
on it go unquestioned. Alas, quantity does not
compensate for quality. It has been customary to
66 FENNIA 192: 1 (2014)Jussi Laine
assume a rather (banal) nationalist stance and
build on uncontroversial acceptance of the histori-
cal setting and current state of affairs. Their actual
merits aside, such writings reproduce a particular
image and perspective and in so doing diminish
room for alternative views. While historical per-
spective and context specificity are crucial for un-
derstanding a particular border, the Finnish-Rus-
sian one in this case, placing it in the greater Euro-
pean perspective broadens the analytical frame
and allows for the interpretations that a more nar-
row approach might preclude.
Similarly, the borders of a particular discipline,
geography in this case, might also confine the ana-
lytical lens. Even if disciplinary specialisation has
its benefits, a strict immersion in a particular field,
as Strober (2006: 315) notes, may limit social in-
novation and the intellectual horizon of research-
ers. Interdisciplinary research, in turn, runs coun-
ter to the disciplinary taken-for-grantednesses,
thus allowing more holistic, richer understanding
of the topic at hand. As Baerwald (2010: 494–495)
remarks, the drive to study the broad ranging and
intertwined problems that encompass a complex
mix of phenomena and processes, which taken to-
gether lie beyond the margins of existing disci-
plines, has impelled the conduct of research that
necessitates inter-, if not postdisciplinary ap-
proach. Fortunately for geographers this is not a
major cause for concern. While many traditional
disciplines are defined by the topics that they
study, geography has been inherently interdiscipli-
nary since its establishment as a modern disci-
pline.
This article draws from the experience from the
border between Finland and the Russian Federa-
tion where cross-border cooperation (CBC) has
reflected both the political and socio-cultural
change as well as politically and economically
motivated interaction. The border provides an il-
luminating laboratory in which to study border
change – or the lack thereof. Finland’s post-World
War II relationship with the Soviet Union, and
more recently with Russia, has been both close
and distant – at times both concurrently. It has
been shaped by a common history, Cold War re-
alities, pragmatism, interdependencies and the
lessons learned from devastating armed conflicts.
Through the analysis of perspectives of civil soci-
ety actors and those voiced in the media, this study
strives to achieve a better understanding of pre-
sent-day multi-layered Finnish-Russian relations,
especially with respect to the role that civil society
plays. The goal is furthermore to introduce new,
more nuanced perspectives to the discussion on
Europeanisation of the institutional and discursive
practices of CBC. Empirically, this article draws
from a mix of material and methods involving the
mapping of actors, newspaper screening, basic
background and more thorough in-depth inter-
views (96 in total) and document analysis. While
the material at hand has been elaborated in detail
elsewhere (see Laine 2013), this article focuses on
analysing the development of the operational
forms of cooperation at the Finnish-Russian border
and suggesting a future trajectory based on the
collected empirical material.
As O’Dowd (2010) argues, by privileging spatial
analysis and over-emphasizing the novelty of on-
going forms of globalisation, many contemporary
border studies lack an adequate historical analy-
sis, arriving, thus, to a disfigured perspective of the
present. After providing a brief overview of the
border studies, this article seeks to recognise the
past in the present by looking back to the distinc-
tive history of the Finnish-Russian border and dis-
cussing the development of the cross-border rela-
tions in the prevailing contexts. It then proceeds to
assess the current situation and places the bina-
tional setting in the broader European context, to
which it is now inherently linked. The article con-
cludes by providing suggestions for the future
management of the cross-border relations.
Border studies as a field of interest
Borders have long been one of the most central
topics to political geography. However, the focus
of border studies has gone through substantial
changes as it has developed in relation to the pre-
dominant geopolitical models and visions – from
studying borders as delimiters of territorial control
and ideology towards areal differentiation and lat-
er towards more dynamic role of borders as bridg-
es rather than barriers.
The emergence of globalisation and the rhetoric
of a ‘borderless world’ only fuelled interest in bor-
ders. The apparent renaissance of border studies
that followed acquired an increasingly interdisci-
plinary take. The significance of borders is doubt-
lessly in flux, but instead of disappearing altogeth-
er, the borders themselves seem to be merely
changing their institutional form. The traditional
definitions and comprehensions of borders have
been challenged primarily because the context in
FENNIA 192: 1 (2014) 67Something old, new, borrowed, and blue: towards a...
which they were created and existed has also al-
tered.
Recently, geographers have delved, inter alia,
into the interrogating potentials for a democratic
governance of borders (Anderson et al. 2003), ex-
clusion and discrimination (van Houtum & Pijpers
2007; van Houtum & Boedeltje 2009), the tech-
nologisation of borders and visualisation practices
(Amoore 2009), violence of borders and ‘teichopol-
itics’ (Elden 2009; Rosière & Jones 2012), the rela-
tionships between ‘traditional’ borders and the so-
called borderless world of networked, topological
space (Paasi 2009), external drivers, such as the EU
and CBC (Popescu 2008; Johnson 2009), the
conflicting logics of ‘national’ borders and ‘supra-
national’ unity (Sidaway 2001), and the ‘new’ Eu-
ropean borders as ‘sharp’ markers of difference
(Scott & van Houtum 2009). However, geography
by no means monopolises border studies. Borders
have spread also not just into international rela-
tions, political sociology, and history, but also into
cultural studies (Rovisco 2010) and philosophy
(Balibar 2009). The bordering (border-making) per-
spective not only transcends disciplinary bounda-
ries, but it takes a step further by advocating that
scientific knowledge ought not to be privileged
over everyday geographical imaginations and
popular geopolitics (Scott 2009).
In the field of border studies, theorising has
proven to be quite a challenge. All borders are
unique, and each of them is related in different
ways to local, regional, state-bound, and suprana-
tional processes – the geosociologies of political
power (Agnew 2005: 47). As a result of this, how-
ever, concerns have been raised that during the
past decade border studies have been overly fo-
cused on case study material, which has been
thought to overshadow attempts to develop the
discussion of concepts, theories, and common
ideas (Newman 2012). There is little abstract theo-
rising in border studies, and those who have at-
tempted to theorise on borders have run into
unique circumstances that make it impossible to
conceptualise broad scale generalisations (Koloss-
ov 2005; Newman 2006).
Even so, attempts have been made. Van Houtum
and van Naerssen (2002) have sought to under-
stand borders through sociological concepts of or-
dering and othering. Brunet-Jailly (2004, 2005)
has put forth an attempt to theorise by drawing the
general lessons that single case studies can offer.
The same logic has been used more recently by
Moré (2011). Newman, who earlier went against
the grain by calling for a general border theory
(Newman 2003a, 2003b, cf. Brunet-Jailly 2004,
2005; Kolossov 2005; Paasi 2005a, 2005b; Rum-
ford 2006), finally gave up and accepted that “it is
futile to seek a single explanatory framework for
the study of borders” (Newman 2006: 145). Border
as a research topic is complex, making the study of
borders so diverse, both in terms of geographic
and spatial scales, that any attempt to create a sin-
gle analytical metatheory is doomed to failure.
Even if most scholars have given up on the en-
terprise, Payan (2013: 3) continues to insist that in
order to advance the field of border studies be-
yond purely descriptive work, “[c]ontinued theo-
rising on borders is not only a pending task but
necessary today, particularly because the optimis-
tic discourse on a borderless world… has fallen
flat and there is in fact a renewed importance as-
signed to borders both in the political and in the
policy world.” He claims that the path to border
theorising is not closed but only out of sight be-
cause border scholars have been looking in the
wrong place. Precisely due to the fact that border
scholars are spread around the world and are in
fact disciplinary and geographical specialists, “of-
ten miss the forest for the trees, and need to take
the bird’s eye view and find what unites us” (Ibid.).
What unites us, Payan (2013) suggests, is our
methods: in order to theorise on borders, scholars
need to engage in a dialogue on the methodologi-
cal strategies as well as the tools used and pick
those that can enhance our explanatory power.
Even though Payan is correct in arguing that more
comparative work in teams is needed in order to
discover the optimal tools to identify what actually
gives shape and character to the borders of today,
his argumentation postulates that border studies
would form its own academic discipline, no differ-
ent in nature, say, from geography, sociology, his-
tory, or anthropology with their own accustomed
and well established currents of research. That,
border studies is not.
This article puts fort that the main contribution
of border studies lies in its ability to draw different
disciplines together. It is fuelled by the diversity
carved out by its eclectic multidisciplinarity. Cre-
ating a metatheory and naming the variables to be
used by all would only restrict the potential that
border studies has to offer. It is given that building
theories and testing them in practice advances our
knowledge. This must not however be done at the
expense of context specificity. All the borders are
unique and it is this uniqueness that makes border
68 FENNIA 192: 1 (2014)Jussi Laine
studies so interesting. While there is no need to
create a single theory, we need not restrict our-
selves to mere case studies either. We can go one
step further to establish broader conceptualisa-
tions, trajectories, and even a common glossary in
order to understand causality and to enhance the
explanatory and predictive power of the methods
used. While all borders are unique, they are still
affected by the same global phenomena; it is their
regional implications that differ.
Despite the forces of globalisation, we remain
located somewhere and this has an impact on how
we perceive that which surrounds us. Even if geo-
graphical realities do not change, their meaning
for different purposes may. As a result, borders
may lose some of their functions while simultane-
ously obtaining new ones; these functions are sel-
dom stable but rather under continuous change.
Borders may not disappear completely, but they
can become more transparent and permeable in
terms of some of their functions. A gradual open-
ing of a previously closed national border enables
the formation of new forms of interaction between
countries but may also reveal political, cultural,
and economic inequalities. All this makes them
more tangible for people, especially borderland-
dwellers.
This is exactly why we need to place people at
the center of things: “[p]eople are not only at the
center of world politics, but they ‘make’ politics”
(Warkentin 2001: 14–15). People as agents, as ac-
tors and doers, have the ability to make things hap-
pen and, secondly, people are also social beings,
naturally oriented towards establishing and main-
taining social relations and conducting their lives
within the context of relational networks (ibid. 17).
Shifting significance of the Finnish-
Russian border
The significance of the Finnish-Russian border has
been highly varied, reflecting not only Finnish-
Russian relations but also changes in global geo-
politics (Paasi 1999: 669). The border was first
drawn as a result of the Treaty of Nöteborg in 1323
between the then rulers of Sweden and Novgorod,
but was then frequently redrawn according to the
changing balance of power. In practice, however,
the border did not exist at the regional level and
people were free to move back and forth for cen-
turies.
While Finland then became an autonomous
grand duchy within the autocratic Russian Empire
in 1809, it nevertheless maintained a national
economy and a customs border with Russia. Even
then, in other respects the border was an open one
and very much a formality (Paasi 1996; Liikanen et
al. 2007: 22). Be it as it may, for the first time in
history, Finland formed an administrative unit of its
own (Katajala 1999).
The border became progressively defined in
terms of an autonomous nation-state in the course
of the nineteenth century, when an active nation-
building process gained ground in Finland (Lii-
kanen 1995). Broad social and political mobilisa-
tion gained momentum at the beginning of the
twentieth century depicting the border as a politi-
cal, social, and cultural dividing line (Alapuro
1988). As Alapuro and Stenius (1989) suggest,
such civic popular movements played a crucial
role in providing the emerging nation with an in-
tellectual or material maturity to declare inde-
pendence in 1917, following the Bolshevik Revo-
lution in Russia.
The Republic of Finland and Soviet Russia
signed a peace treaty (Treaty of Tartu) in 1920 in
order to stabilise political relations and settle the
borderline between them. In Finland, a strong ef-
fort was made immediately to secure the border in
order to signify the territoriality of an independent
state. A heavily guarded, hostile military border
was formed and all forms of cooperation interrupt-
ed.
The border between Finland and the Soviet Un-
ion was the longest border between a western
capitalist state and a socialist super power (Paasi
1999: 670). In addition to its ideological weight,
the border was increasingly perceived as playing
distinct historical, political, natural, and yet artifi-
cial roles (Paasi 1996), the influences which are
still felt today. Within the Cold War geopolitical
order, Finland sought neutrality and became
placed into the grey zone between the Eastern and
Western blocs. Whereas Finland had been a ‘West-
ern’ country in the geopolitical literature prior to
World War II, many post-war representations
placed it in Eastern Europe (Paasi 1996) as “a semi-
independent oddity positioned under the Russian
sphere of influence” (Moisio 2003).
The crux of the matter was that the 1948 Agree-
ment of Friendship, Cooperation, and Mutual As-
sistance allowed the Soviet Union to interfere with
Finland’s domestic life. Even though the new geo-
political regime based on the treaty included more
FENNIA 192: 1 (2014) 69Something old, new, borrowed, and blue: towards a...
extensive economic interaction, the border re-
mained heavily guarded and practically closed.
The longer it remained closed, the wider the gap
between the countries grew. This was hardly
helped by the fact that during the Cold War the
border became increasingly seen as a line divining
two competing socio-political systems, the com-
munist and the capitalist, and forming a ‘civilisa-
tional’ frontier zone between East and West.
The situation changed radically once the Soviet
Union ceased to exist. Finland recognised the Rus-
sian Federation as the Soviet Union’s successor
and was quick to draft bilateral treaties with it. The
new treaty, named straightforwardly as the “Agree-
ment on the Foundations of Relations between the
Republic of Finland and the Russian Federation”
(Finnish Treaty Series 63/1992) and consisting of
12 compact articles, was signed with a newly
formed Russia in January 1992. Its adaptation nul-
lified the previous friendship treaty and the special
relations dictated by it. The treaty also set in mo-
tion Finland’s Neighbouring Area Cooperation
(NAC) programme, which then became the key
channel for cross-border interaction with Russia.
Perhaps the most significant aspects of the new
treaty was that it allowed Finland to make the
move towards what was consider to be its right ref-
erence group (Sutela 2001: 6–7); in March 1992,
only a few weeks after signing the new treaty, Fin-
land applied for EU membership.
The EUropean Frame
When joining the Union in 1995, Finland jumped
onto a moving train. The process of European inte-
gration was underway and had been fuelled re-
markably, first, by the signing of the Single Euro-
pean Act in 1986 and, second, by the new en-
largement prospects evoked by the collapse of the
Soviet Union and the end of the Cold War. By its
nature this process necessitated policies aiming to
transcend internal borders, perceived in Schu-
manian integrative spirit as products and remain-
ders of former conflicts. Borders were depicted as
the results of the differentiation of groups in space.
Keeping ‘us’ apart from ‘them,’ they were per-
ceived to preserve heterogeneity and a lack of co-
herence, both to be replaced with unity and com-
mon Europeanness. As integration was assumed to
follow from increased interaction, borders as bar-
riers had to be eroded, whereby the role of border-
lands as integrators became of high importance.
Underpinned by a strong regional development
and spatial planning rationale, cross-border coop-
eration became a tool for building cohesion and
blurring divides while local cross-border diploma-
cy enjoyed, first and foremost, a more a symbolic
status.
With the EU membership, activities formerly ad-
ministered through bilateral, state-level agree-
ments became a part of the broader dynamics of
international politics and EU-Russia relations. The
binational border was suddenly upgraded to an
external EU border, and this necessitated also
amendments in political language and rhetoric. As
Emerson (2001: 29) states, the Finnish-Russian
border served as a prime example of a clean-cut
periphery where one empire ended and another
began. The Finnish domestic debate thus acquired
an alternative thread, which depicted Finland,
having the only EU land border with Russia, as a
sort of a bridge builder between the two. For this
reason and also because of the increased impor-
tance of the EU’s borders that was observed in the
key EU decision-making bodies, Finland now had
a unique opportunity to profile itself in the field.
Given its geographic location, Finland became
a logical avenue for increasing EU-Russian trade.
The Finnish easterly business expertise stemming
from the Soviet era was used to market Finland
both as a gateway to Russia and a window to the
West. As a new EU member state, Finland was also
interested in providing the EU with a special agen-
da towards its Russian border, i.e., towards the
“challenges and possibilities presented by having
Russia as a neighbour” (Stubb 2009). This then ma-
terialised in the form of the Northern Dimension
initiative.
The opportunities were not, however, really re-
alised until it became clear that Finland’s distinc-
tion of being Russia’s only EU neighbour would be
threatened by the upcoming 2004 enlargement.
While the domestic debate remained largely un-
changed, at the EU level Finland began, wilfully
and consistently, to proclaim itself as something of
a litigator of Russia in all things Europe, even if
with only occasional success, claiming to possess
Russian expertise that others did or could not have
(Laine 2011). The Finnish-Swedish border became
an internal EU border, yet practically nothing
changed, as passage had been unrestrained al-
ready for decades. Thanks to the Nordic Passport
Union, also the Finnish-Norwegian border, now
officially an external EU border, remained uncon-
70 FENNIA 192: 1 (2014)Jussi Laine
trolled. As of 1996, all Nordic countries joined the
Schengen Agreement, which became fully applied
from March 25, 2001 onwards.
The 2004 enlargement of the EU and the intro-
duction of European Neighbourhood Policy (ENP)
policy epitomise a political attempt to extend the
‘de-bordering’ momentum of the late 1980s and
1990s beyond the territory of ‘Core Europe’ (see
e.g. Scott 2009). The EU embarked on an ambi-
tions mission to look beyond its internal borders
and create a transnational space extending beyond
its external borders by engaging neighbouring
states in a new process of cross-border regionalisa-
tion. Despite being marketed as ‘Ring of Friends,’
this approach embodied an apparent shift where-
by the 1989–2003 ‘scars of history’ discourse that
had attempted to transcend borders began to be
replaced by a securitisation discourse. Particularly
the external borders re-emerged in practical and
discursive/symbolic terms as markers of sharp – to
an extent civilisational – difference (van Houtum
& Pijpers 2007).
Suffering from an acute form of enlargement fa-
tigue, the EU moved to stabilise and consolidate
itself as a post-national political community. For-
mal relations with the neighbouring countries
were privileged at the expense of local coopera-
tion, which as a consequence became increasing-
ly based on context and need ad hoc. This trans-
formed the integrative role of the borderlands to
that of a buffer zone or a filter. While the new
forms of regional cooperation were presumably
based on mutual interdependence, the EU’s re-
strictive border and visa regimes gave an unam-
biguously exclusionary impact, making the EU
seem to be a contradictory international actor.
Following the rise of nationalist populism,
sparked by the events of 9/11 and fuelled further
by threat scenarios of illegal immigration and a
general loss of control over not just borders but
domestic issues of all sorts, defining ‘European’ in
cultural-civilisational terms became an increas-
ingly mainstream political discourse. This led to a
heightened demand for more defensive borders for
the EU as a whole. On the level of member states,
the reclamation of national identity and sovereign-
ty, often termed as a ‘re-bordering’ (Scott 2009;
Dimitrovova 2012) led the national governments
to challenge the EU’s top-down supranational
thrust. In Finland, the rise of national populism
was not directed in any specific way against Russia
or Russians but built on the argument that immi-
grants in general are threatening Finnish jobs and
welfare and, in more extreme cases, Finnish cul-
ture. Similar tendencies are apparent in Russia,
where its leadership has resorted actively to na-
tionalist rhetoric and foreign threat scenarios in
order to lead the lower and the upper classes and
to control the growing middle class and civil soci-
ety in between.
The consequent juggle between cooperation
and security-oriented agendas has led to contra-
dictory bordering practices whereby a considera-
ble gap exists between the projected geopolitical
vision and its translation into action. A telling indi-
cator of this is the imbalance in resources allotted
to CBC. While the EU’s Cohesion and Regional
Policy for 2007–2013 has an operating budget of
EUR 347 billion (35.7% of the total EU budget for
that period), the budget for the European Neigh-
bourhood and Partnership Instrument (ENPI) for
the same period amounts to some EUR 11 billion
– only some five per cent of which is allocated for
actual CBC programs. Ironically, this is less than
what the EU is investing in security research under
its wider R&D budget for 2007–2013. According-
ly, the EU’s promise of a ‘privileged partnership’ is
downplayed by the fact that while the ENPI does
provide limited co-funding also for non-EU mem-
bers, the sums are much less than what was avail-
able through previous programs.
Russia: so near and yet so far
Today, the spectrum of Finnish-Russian relations is
unprecedentedly broad and diverse. Still, at least
the official storyline focuses mainly on interstate
relations, fostering in so doing the perception of
the Finnish-Russian border as a traditional bina-
tional state border, on the different sides of which
Finnishness and Russianness, respectively, is acted
out in the frame of a nation-state. Such a collective
‘practice of nation’ affects also political behaviour
by relocating the emphasis of understanding away
from powerful social actors to the everyday repeti-
tion of national ‘rituals’ (Githens-Mazer 2007).
Even though the dialogue between the two
countries has become more ‘normal,’ at the level
of interstate relations Finland has sought to con-
tinue the ‘special relationship’ and stay among the
‘good countries’. The Presidents, the Prime Minis-
ters, and Foreign Ministers meet regularly during
bilateral visits but also at international and Euro-
pean forums. Within the Cabinet Finland’s rela-
tionship with Russia is discussed on a regular ba-
FENNIA 192: 1 (2014) 71Something old, new, borrowed, and blue: towards a...
sis. In addition, the aim has been to create direct
and effective relations between all ministries and
key government bodies with their counterparts in
Russia. According to Alexander Rumyantsev
(2012), the current Russian ambassador to Fin-
land, Finnish-Russian relations are built on mutu-
ally beneficial issues. According to him, these in-
clude open political dialogue, increasing trade,
more than ten million border crossings, a gas pipe-
line in the Baltic Sea, the Saimaa Canal, the Hel-
sinki-St. Petersburg high-speed railway, and cul-
tural cooperation.
Even though Finnish-Russian relations are com-
monly addressed from a more or less equal footing
– in the media and also in academia – it is hard to
erase the apparent fact that the relationship is, in
the end, quite a typical relationship between a
small state and a superpower. Russia is not Swe-
den for Finland, nor should it be (Lounasmeri
2011: 15). Such neighbourly relations are always
more important for the smaller country – Finland
needs Russia, but Russia would quite likely man-
age just fine without Finland. The city of St. Peters-
burg alone has a greater population than Finland
as a whole. By total area, Russia is 50 times larger
than Finland, and the Soviet Union was 66 times
larger.
The two countries share significant overlaps in
history, and with the exception of a couple of con-
flicts, the relationship between the two has re-
mained somehow ‘special.’ With a common bor-
der of more than 1,300 km, Finland has always
been closely tied to its eastern neighbour. Despite
the physical proximity, the Cold War era closure of
the border increased the mental distance between
the two sides. For a long time, a good fence indeed
made good neighbours, but it also made the other
side seem increasingly unfamiliar. The resultant
‘us’ versus ‘them’ mentality sketched in the minds
of many has proven to be far more deeply rooted
and harder to erase than the border per se.
The Finnish nation building process in the late
nineteenth century and particularly the post-Civil
War White history writing have projected Russia
as eternal other to Finland. In order to build a co-
herent nation, it was necessary to define who ‘us’
actually were and what was actually ‘ours’ – and
in order to demarcate that, a border was utterly
needed. In a way, the Finnish identity was built on
differences vis-à-vis its neighbours; Finns were
something that Swedes and Russian were not. Ac-
cordingly, the borders have played a key role in
the Finnish nation and identity building; to remove
them would therefore remove part of the Finnish
identity.
Balancing at the border of East and West was
not taken as a zero–sum game. Finnish President
Paasikivi’s dictum that if one bows to the West one
is bound to turn one’s bottom to the East – and vice
versa – has never been put to a test. The mutually
understood fact that “We cannot do anything for
geography, nor can you” has been, contrary to its
original connotation, transformed to mean that the
two countries now had a lot of potential to utilise
the opportunities offered by geographical proxim-
ity (see Stubb 2008).
The overriding question of Finnish foreign poli-
cy, as Finland’s long-serving President (1956–
1981) Urho Kekkonen (1958) explained, is the re-
lations with her Eastern neighbour “upon which
our destiny rests” and the “future of our nation
depends…” – “[t]his always has been the case and
always will be.” Kekkonen had co-opted many of
his ideas from his predecessor, J. K. Paasikivi,
whose thinking derived from Lord Macaulay’s sug-
gestion that the beginning of all wisdom lay in the
recognition of facts. Paasikivi’s famous foreign
policy line maintained that Finnish foreign policy
should never run counter to the Soviet Union and
our Eastern neighbour must be convinced of our
determination to prove this. The Finnish-Soviet re-
lations in aggregate became later personified
strongly by Kekkonen, who discussed important
issues directly with the Soviet leadership often
with little or no consultation with his own admin-
istration or the parliament (Saukkonen 2006).
The ‘Paasikivi line,’ ranking all other issues be-
hind relations with the Soviet Union, was adhered
to for decades. Outside the country, the line be-
came dubbed ‘Finlandisation,’ a term coined in
1961 by German political scientist Richard Löwen-
thal. The pros and cons of this policy are still ac-
tively debated. A secret CIA Intelligence Report of
August 1972, which was approved for release in
May 2007, found that “the Finns have ingeniously
maintained their independence, but a limited one
indeed, heavily influenced by the USSR’s proxi-
mate military might, a preconditioned prudence
not to offend Moscow, and the existence of various
Soviet capabilities to complicate Finland’s domes-
tic life” (Central Intelligence Agency 1972: 3).
Whereas the right-wing commentators accuse the
Finnish government of continuing the policy of
Finlandisation, commentators more towards the
left underline that such an approach was, and to a
limited degree still is, necessary in order to cope
72 FENNIA 192: 1 (2014)Jussi Laine
and deal with a culturally and ideologically alien
superpower without losing sovereignty. Finlandi-
sation has remained a sensitive issue in Finnish
public discourse to this day.
As a Grand Duchy under Russian rule, Finland
had maintained a custom border with Russia. Rus-
sia had been clearly the most important trade part-
ner for Finland for decades until the World War I
changed the situation profoundly. With the out-
break of war in 1914, Finland's foreign trade grew
as a result of increased orders from Russia. At the
same time, the trade deficit deepened due to the
foreclosure of Western markets. A couple of years
later, the situation changed even more drastically
as a result of the Russian revolution and civil war
in 1917; all forms of trade were terminated (Fig. 1).
Russia’s share of Finnish exports and imports fell
abruptly from 97% and 68% respectively to zero
(Finnish Customs 2007). The trade between the
countries remained at very low levels throughout
the entire 1920s and 1930s.
After the Second World War, trade upticked
again, even though otherwise the border remained
practically closed, as Finland was forced to pay the
Soviet Union’s sizeable war reparations. From the
1950s onwards, Finnish-Soviet trade was based on
a bilateral clearing agreement, which dictated that
both Finnish imports to and exports from the USSR
had to be equal in value. This meant that the more
Finland purchased supplies from the USSR, the
more the USSR was obligated to purchase supplies
from Finland. This system was often presented,
particularly in Soviet propaganda, as an example
of how a large socialist country and a small capi-
talist country can engage in mutually beneficial
cooperation and trade (Laurila 1995: 11).
Despite the strained relations during the post-
World War II climate, the Soviet Union was, until
its collapse, by far Finland’s most important trading
partner. Even though largely politically deter-
mined, the bilateral trade had helped Finland to
industrialise and contributed to its welfare in sev-
eral ways. The Finnish economy had been structur-
ally dependent on this trade with its Eastern neigh-
bour to such an extent that its sudden disappear-
ance contributed to an economic recession in
Finland, which soon deepened into a depression
on a scale not seen since the early 1930s.
Trade relations have been on the mend from the
1998 Russian financial crisis. Even though trade
and investments have not boomed hand in hand
with levels of cross-border traffic, during the last
decade trade between the countries grew steadily.
A major driver behind the growth of Finnish ex-
ports to Russia was re-exports, i.e., goods that are
imported by a purchaser in one country who then
exports the product to a third country without pro-
cessing (Ollus & Simola 2007). The most recent
0
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30
40
50
60
70
80
90
100
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7
2
1
8
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6
1
8
8
0
1
8
8
4
1
8
8
8
1
8
9
2
1
8
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6
1
9
0
0
1
9
0
4
1
9
0
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1
2
1
9
1
6
1
9
2
0
1
9
2
4
1
9
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8
1
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3
2
1
9
3
6
1
9
4
0
1
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4
4
1
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4
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1
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2
1
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6
1
9
6
0
1
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4
1
9
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1
9
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2
1
9
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6
1
9
8
0
1
9
8
4
1
9
8
8
1
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2
1
9
9
6
2
0
0
0
2
0
0
4
2
0
0
8
2
0
1
1
Exports to USSR/Russia Imports to USSR/Russia
Fig. 1. Share of Russia/Soviet Union/Russia in Finland’s Foreign Trade 1860–2011. Per cent of total exports and imports. Data
Source: Bank of Finland and the National Board of Customs, Finland.
FENNIA 192: 1 (2014) 73Something old, new, borrowed, and blue: towards a...
economic crisis slowed down exports to Russia by
not less than 47% and imports by 31% respective-
ly between 2008 and 2009 (Finnish National
Board of Customs 2009), thought already in 2011
imports (85% of which was energy) rebounded
over the pre-crisis figures to more than EUR 11 bil-
lion and exports more modestly from EUR 4 bil-
lion in 2009 to EUR 5.3 billion in 2011 (Finnish
National Board of Customs 2012).
As Haukkala (2003, 2009) argues, Finland has
gained Russian elite’s trust due to its historically
rooted tendency towards pragmatism. He points
out that unlike many central and eastern European
countries traumatised by communist-era experi-
ences of direct coercion and ideological subjecti-
fication, Finland’s relationship with Russia has al-
ways been based on more or less voluntary and
down-to-earth interaction. The continuation of this
‘special relationship’ does not imply that problems
do not exist. Recent bilateral issues include, but
are not limited to, persistent truck queues at the
border, airspace violations, the pollution of the
Baltic Sea, and an increase in Russian duties on
wood exported to feed Finland’s pulp and paper
industry, the latter of which has, however, now
been somewhat eased as the WTO welcomed the
Russian Federation as its 156th member on August
22, 2012. The so-called Karelian question, the de-
bate over Finland’s re-acquisition of the ceded ter-
ritories, and potential borderline adjustment pops
up in the public discussion every now and then
but cannot be regarded as a political issue as both
of the governments in question agree that no open
territorial dispute exists between the countries.
On the other hand, Russia has retained its posi-
tion as Finland’s favourite enemy. As stated by the
former Minister of Defence Jyri Häkämies (Nation-
al Coalition Party) in his (in-)famous speech given
at the Center for Strategic and International Studies
in Washington on September 6, 2007, the three
main security challenges for Finland are “Russia,
Russia, and Russia.” It is unclear whether the up-
roar that followed was sparked by Häkämies being
simply wrong or perhaps because his remarks had
hit too close to the mark.
As the Cold War came to end along with the
Soviet Union, academic research devoted to the
topic of Russia was downscaled in most Western
countries. In Finland, however, the opposite hap-
pened. A freer climate allowed for more objective
research. Even so, most studies have focused on
what Russia lacks rather than on what it has to of-
fer. Few studies explore Russia as it was, but in-
stead approach it as being always undergoing
some kind of reform or transition into something
(Smith 2012). As a result, the knowledge and un-
derstanding of the current situation in Russia as
well as the factors behind it remained slim. This, in
turn, limited the ability to realistically assess the
impact of Russia on Finland and the rest of Europe
as well as the extent to which there could be a
meaningful debate about what should be done
and, in particular, what can be done.
While what was stated above has sought to ex-
plain the broader context within which cross-bor-
der interaction has evolved, more attention needs
to be paid on civil society and individuals’ per-
sonal networks, which form the very backbone of
the relations. While Finnish businesses have had
clear difficulties adapting to the unfamiliar condi-
tions in Russia and the jurisdiction of governments
stops at the political border, individual citizens
and civil society organisations are less restricted
from moving back and forth across the border and
entering into cooperative relationships. These con-
nections also provide an alternative avenue for co-
operation when interstate relations go sour and
eventually play also a vital role in re-establishing
relations.
The core of the cooperation is heavily based on
very few key network actors. A lot of local level
work has been and is done, which does not be-
come visible through the analysis of different pro-
grams or funding instruments. Even if cooperation
across the border has been troublesome and even
disappointing for many individual actors and or-
ganisations, the networks have managed to keep
up active cooperation across the border already
for a long time – heedless of individual project
time frames or funding periods. It is exactly this
type of long-term cooperation that is perceived as
most beneficial by the actors themselves.
The Finnish-Russian relations and the
border in between
Finnish-Russian relations are a broader phenom-
enon than customary bilateral relations between
two states. They are based on common history
and those lessons learned from it, geographical
proximity and the long common border, cultural
linkages and the existence of kindred peoples,
and economic development and trade interde-
pendencies, as well as environmental factors that
74 FENNIA 192: 1 (2014)Jussi Laine
respect no borders. The relations have been both
close and distant – at times both at the same time.
They cannot be explained by the mere supply and
demand factors, but the motivations for coopera-
tion range from a sense of duty to an outright ne-
cessity. As a partner in cooperation, Russia is per-
ceived at the same time as an opportunity and a
drag, with high hopes and frustration. Like border
regions in general, the Finnish-Russian border re-
gion is characterised by specific forms of living
together that entail tolerance, solidarity and spe-
cial know-how.
Only by being aware of the fact that the ‘teach-
ings of history’ are open to various interpretations
can the right decisions be made today without be-
ing blind to the political use of history. What Rus-
sia signifies to Finns has to be viewed through
multiple lenses, all of which alter the picture in
their own specific way. The era of Finland as an
autonomous Grand Duchy in the Russian Empire,
the nation building process in the latter half of the
nineteenth century, years of oppression in the ear-
ly 1900s, the confrontation between the bour-
geois and the socialists, gaining independence in
1917, the civil war of 1918, the power struggle
between democracy and the right-wing dictator-
ship from the 1920s until 1936, then the Winter
and Continuation War, after which Finland had to
live in the shadows of the Soviet Union for five
decades, have all added something to the com-
plexity of these bilateral relations.
Even though the Finnish-Soviet/Russian rela-
tions have been full of twists and turns, public
opinion has changed more slowly. The analysis of
this level of the relations is also important, as this
is where much of the people-to-people interaction
takes place. While more general Western attitudes
towards Russia have turned, at times in an instant,
from euphoria to outrage and from despair to
hope, Finns’ underlying attitudes towards Russia
have been more stable. This can partly be ex-
plained by the fact that Russia is constantly pre-
sent in the Finnish media and general public de-
bate while elsewhere, further away, its image is
formed based on more pointed events. Finns re-
main reserved and ground their stance on past
experience. Whether this is called Russophobia or
just realism depends on the angle taken.
The Finnish debate about Russia has certainly
evolved during the last two decades, but the pro-
cess has not been linear, nor has it been uncom-
plicated. Instead, multiple alternative trends have
emerged and there is still plenty of room for inter-
pretation. This is to say that the image and mean-
ing of Russia has not simply changed from one to
another, but it is seen differently in different con-
texts, at different levels sectors, and by different
actors. Russia looks very different depending on
whether it is approached at the level of everyday
life, as a next-door neighbour, or as a global re-
emerging superpower.
The end of the Cold War provided a new begin-
ning, but few knew exactly with whom Finland
was now dealing with. The neighbour that Finns
had learned to know, in both good and bad, sud-
denly disappeared. As a result, the previously sta-
ble border concept was also transformed into
something broader and more complex. All this
created uncertainly that downplayed the potential
that could have been gained from the freer cli-
mate and the more open border. As a neighbour,
the Soviet Union had not been the easiest kind,
but at least the risk associated with living next to a
sleeping giant could be assessed and managed,
and the dangers could be judged. With its succes-
sor, the Russian Federation, the rules of the game
changed fundamentally. The probabilities became
harder to estimate because there was no longer
any clear basis for making such a judgment.
Freer climate enabled new interpretations of
the position of Finland, but they also marked de-
constructive moments for the Finnish nation-state
and the presumed unity between the nation and
the state. Joenniemi (1993: 19) was quick to argue
that as the permanent threat the Soviet Union was
perceived to have lost its credibility, the meaning
of state sovereignty could be put under scrutiny.
The more open conditions allowed for the decon-
struction of age-old stereotypes about ‘Russian-
ness’ and ‘Finnishness’ derived from the past and
related to World War II and the era of a closed
border and also cleared the way for the image to
be reconstructed in a more truthful manner.
EU membership provided further treatment for
the long-common-border-syndrome and suggest-
ed a move away from the geodeterministic prem-
ise whereby the geography of Finland predeter-
mined or at least limited its choices with regard to
its political development. The increasingly inter-
national context necessitated that national unity
be redefined once again. This process is evidently
still going on today.
The external environment has changed radi-
cally during the last two decades and so too has
Finland. Increased cooperation has eroded the
understanding of the border with Russia as a
FENNIA 192: 1 (2014) 75Something old, new, borrowed, and blue: towards a...
strict cut-off line shutting-off contacts and retain-
ing, if not generating, the mind-set of repression,
injustice, conflict, or even war. While the border
is still a state border, the transnational practices
that transcend it allow it to be approached as a
social practice, situated within an understanding
of neighbourliness that recognises and respects
the values of the other and the contributions that
it makes. The opportunities that would be al-
lowed by more open conditions have not, how-
ever, been grasped to their full potential. The
mental aspects of the border remain etched into
the minds of the people so profoundly that its
relevance has not faded even though the actual
institutional border has subsided. The border still
functions as a barrier, but its partial permeability
allows for the relations across it to be now, at
last, shaped by dialog rather than by confronta-
tion. This dialog allows both sides of the border
to gain more knowledge about their neighbour,
which in turn fosters mutual understanding, an-
other important prerequisite for effective coop-
eration.
An unequal border setting, such as the Finn-
ish-Russia border, is characterized not only by
various asymmetries but also complementarities
that, in turn, generate a variety of cross-border
linkages. Increased linkages are not only a result
of successful policies and practices, but also an
essential prerequisite for future development.
Thanks to the changes in the governance modes,
rescaling of the state, constantly widening and
deepening integration processes, strengthening
regionalisation, and the raising influence of
trans- and international organisations, the state is
no longer the primary actor, nor is the nation-
state the only conception of space to be applied
in explaining human interaction. The state is not,
however, disappearing but merely being organ-
ized differently. State sovereignty and authority
has been weakened upwards, downwards, and
sideways. There are increased negotiations not
just among governments at several territorial tiers
but also between the various sectors of society.
The world politics of today involve many non-
state actors who interact with each other, with
states, and with international organizations, at
times skipping a level or two in between. When
taken together, these revolutionary changes have
led to a transition from international (border con-
firming) to transnational (border eroding) rela-
tions, implying, as a result, a clear shift away
from state-centeredness.
Concluding remarks: away from state
centricity
Borders are not fixed or something that must be
overcome. They are evolving constructions,
which have both merits and problems that must
be constantly reweighed. This must be done, as
Paasi has repeatedly argued, because borders
are institutions and symbols that are produced
and reproduced in social practices and dis-
courses. As they can be constructed, they can
also be deconstructed – should there be will to
do so. As a band of border scholars have discov-
ered, borders do not pre-exist, but they are al-
ways an outcome of social and political pro-
cesses; change the process and you change the
border.
Changing the focus from seeing like a state to
seeing like a border, as Rumford (2008) has ad-
vised, would allow us to disaggregate the state
and the border, and unveil the potential that
various actors of civil society hold in construct-
ing, shifting, or even in erasing borders. If the
border is no longer seen in national terms, and
if the interaction is deemed not to occur be-
tween two states, but among people from these
two, or more, states, such borderwork would go
beyond issues of national belonging or citizen-
ship as to allow expressions of transnational
mobility and sincere actorhood apart from state,
or the EU, supported agendas. Various organisa-
tion of civil society are not only carrying out
tasks defined by others. Instead, they them-
selves play a key role in articulating and modi-
fying the objectives and practices of coopera-
tion.
While the significance of the interstate rela-
tions and great power politics cannot be ig-
nored, they alone are incapable of explaining
the multileveled and multiscaled processes that
take place today. Thanks to the institutionalisa-
tion of cooperation (e.g., Euregio Karelia), the
relationships especially between regional level
officials and authorities on the two sides of the
border have improved. CBC projects and also
less-visible personal-level interactions have sig-
nificantly contributed to a more mutual under-
standing and interdependence, accumulation of
trust, and the breaking down of mental barriers
(cf. Németh et al. 2012). The relationship may
still be far from ideal, or even what could be
considered as normal between two countries
76 FENNIA 192: 1 (2014)Jussi Laine
sharing a long common border. Still, at least in
comparison with high-level geopolitics, more
bottom-up civil society cooperation seems to be
developing forward and cultivating varying de-
grees of interdependence.
The ENP era brought along a greater empha-
sis on civil society in CBC across the external
EU border but it also included a hidden agenda:
an attempt to approach Russia through an alter-
native channel and to create operational basis
for bottom-up forces seeking to influence the
system. However, the post-Lisbon securitisation
emphasis along the general new ‘realism’ in EU
foreign policy has changed the picture yet
again. Talks about the ‘ring of friends,’ which
underlined the need to create better links with
neighbours, now focus increasingly on a ‘se-
cure neighbourhood’ and the need to create a
supportive buffer zone. Accordingly, the EU
seems to have lost some of its faith in CBC and
in the transformation process in Russia. This has
urged the Union to retreat precisely to where it
should not be – at the level of socio-cultural
communication.
If the local and regional level CBC is expect-
ed to thrive also in the future, all the levels will
need to have better understanding of their own
role and of the division of labour in this equa-
tion. More funding that is better directed, more
easily accessible, and more reliable is needed
where the practical knowledge and expertise is.
It cannot be based on the superficial friendship
rhetoric, but careful planning is needed in order
to move beyond the formalities and maintain
the cooperation successfully. Much depends on
individual actors who are able to shoulder the
implementation of the agreed programs and to
solve emerging problems and disagreements.
As the EU’s conditionality principle cannot
be applied to Russia, a country without aspira-
tions of EU membership, the carrot needs to be
found elsewhere. Certainly, the EU’s role in
fuelling cooperation cannot be denied, as it cer-
tainly has created a supportive frame and a fo-
rum within which cooperation and regional dia-
logue has developed. It has also brought new
impetus and forced the Finnish actors to move
beyond the old rhetoric based on past experi-
ences. Still, the future trajectory whereby bina-
tional cooperation would rely entirely on sup-
port from Brussels sounds very unnatural. Espe-
cially as long as there are no practical means to
distribute EU funds to the local level where
much of the work is carried out. The main mo-
tives and initiatives for the cooperation have to
arise from the local needs and concerns.
In the light of current trends towards the de-
centralisation and privatisation of public ser-
vices in both Finland and Russia, it would be
prescient to conceptualise a cross-border space
for social contracting and social welfare poli-
cies through civil society organisations. Such a
more social economy focused approach would
offer alternative ways to generate social and
economic welfare and innovative solutions to
society's most pressing social problems thought
social entrepreneurship. New support structures
could promote collaborative forms of policy
formulation and delivery based on partnerships
involving the state, the private sector, founda-
tions, and civil society at large. This is particu-
larly important in peripheral regions with limit-
ed prospects for short-term returns on social
investment and where multiple support mecha-
nisms are needed in order to nurture entrepre-
neurial activity. One possible strategy would be
to develop international networks between
public, private, and nonprofit sector actors that
provide assistance to emerging and future so-
cial entrepreneurs through a variety of means,
including: support in project development, se-
curing grants, and assistance in the acquisition
and provision of loans and investment capital,
as well as training, advisory, logistical, and in-
formational support.
The best way to normalise neighbourly rela-
tions is through increased people-to-people
interaction, and preferable this ought to occur
from the bottom-up, not from the top-down.
Given that the NAC program has been termi-
nated and that the ENPI CBC is not properly
equipped to deal with the overall context
within which Finnish-Russian cooperation
takes place, there is a risk that despite the rhe-
torical statements suggesting otherwise, the
EUropeanisation of Finnish-Russian coopera-
tion may well become underfunded and more
technocratic. This will put the durability of
cross-border contacts to the test, but it also al-
lows CBC to be restructured and redesigned
away from predefined funding programs, peri-
ods, and priorities. Unrestricted people-to-
people interaction feeds inspiration and inno-
vation and leads to new solutions – also in
terms of financing. There is little reason to ex-
pect anything less.
FENNIA 192: 1 (2014) 77Something old, new, borrowed, and blue: towards a...
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