This book analyzes the pattern of security concerns of the Central Asian successor states. This region is said to encompass Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan, Tadzhikistan, Kirghizstan and Turkmenistan. The main contention of the book is that the security problems of these states are similar to those that faced other "Third World" countries after they attained independence. That is, due to the arbitrary creation of these states by external powers they lack a certain degree of societal cohesiveness arising from the fact that several ethnic communities reside within their borders. It is this so called "insecurity dilemma" of each of the Central Asian states that is therefore examined
The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 created five new independent Central Asian states and fu...
Under the Soviet Union rule, Central Asia was a closed region with no access to the outside world. B...
Most books on the Caucasus and Central Asia are country-by-country studies. This book, on the other ...
The thesis is a comparative examination of selected security threats and vulnerabilities which confr...
In late 1991, the five Central Asian republics became politically independent entities. With no expe...
Studies before and after the collapse of the Soviet Union indicated that the Bolsheviks have not bee...
This study will analyze main security threats in Central Asia. It is obvious thatsince ...
This thesis evaluates the sociological consequences for Soviet Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan,...
Central Asia has been a region of various interests for many centuries. The collapse of the Soviet U...
In every period of history many parts and territories of the world divide and get a new shape. There...
"Western military presence wanes in Afghanistan and a transformed security environment challenges bo...
AbstractIn every period of history many parts and territories of the world divide and get a new shap...
The thesis tracks the emergence of western forms of nationalism in republics of Post-Soviet Central ...
This article discusses the current process of securitisation in Central Asia and identifies its conv...
End of the cold war following the disintegration of the Soviet Union witnessed unprecedented increas...
The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 created five new independent Central Asian states and fu...
Under the Soviet Union rule, Central Asia was a closed region with no access to the outside world. B...
Most books on the Caucasus and Central Asia are country-by-country studies. This book, on the other ...
The thesis is a comparative examination of selected security threats and vulnerabilities which confr...
In late 1991, the five Central Asian republics became politically independent entities. With no expe...
Studies before and after the collapse of the Soviet Union indicated that the Bolsheviks have not bee...
This study will analyze main security threats in Central Asia. It is obvious thatsince ...
This thesis evaluates the sociological consequences for Soviet Central Asia (Kazakhstan, Uzbekistan,...
Central Asia has been a region of various interests for many centuries. The collapse of the Soviet U...
In every period of history many parts and territories of the world divide and get a new shape. There...
"Western military presence wanes in Afghanistan and a transformed security environment challenges bo...
AbstractIn every period of history many parts and territories of the world divide and get a new shap...
The thesis tracks the emergence of western forms of nationalism in republics of Post-Soviet Central ...
This article discusses the current process of securitisation in Central Asia and identifies its conv...
End of the cold war following the disintegration of the Soviet Union witnessed unprecedented increas...
The dissolution of the Soviet Union in 1991 created five new independent Central Asian states and fu...
Under the Soviet Union rule, Central Asia was a closed region with no access to the outside world. B...
Most books on the Caucasus and Central Asia are country-by-country studies. This book, on the other ...