the new silk road Authors Konstantin Lidin https://orcid.org/0000-0001-7022-6871 Downloads PDF DOI: https://doi.org/10.51461/projectbaikal.72.1986 Keywords: Great Silk Road, New Silk Road, linear projects Abstract Thousands of years ago, a system of routes was taking shape across the Eurasian continent, transporting people, goods, ideas and technology from east to west and from west to east. The armies of Alexander the Great and Genghis Khan passed along those routes; caravans of merchants carried silk, porcelain, spices and wisdom books. Today the concept of the Great Silk Road is not just coming to life, but is becoming one of the largescale ideas for the development of dozens of states, up to the global level. The New Silk Road will be implemented simultaneously along many parallel paths. The southern ones will pass across the territories of Central Asia, Iran and Turkey. The northern routes will mainly run through Russia, including its Arctic territorial waters. These large-scale linear projects represent a major challenge and, at the same time, a tremendous development opportunity for many decades (centuries?) ahead. We start to discuss the New Silk Road by selecting materials on some specific aspects of the project and look forward to discussing it further – as its global nature demands. How to Cite Lidin, K. (2022). the new silk road . Project Baikal, 19(72), 103–103. https://doi.org/10.51461/projectbaikal.72.1986 More Citation Formats ACM ACS APA ABNT Chicago Harvard IEEE MLA Turabian Vancouver Download Citation Endnote/Zotero/Mendeley (RIS) BibTeX Published 2022-06-24 Issue No. 72 (2022): linearity Section editorial License This work is licensed under a Creative Commons Attribution 4.0 International License.