1st Edition

Central Asia at the End of the Transition

By Boris Z. Rumer Copyright 2005
    464 Pages
    by Routledge

    464 Pages
    by Routledge

    For better or worse, the former Soviet republics of Central Asia have largely completed their post-independence transitions. Over more than a decade, they have established themselves as independent states whose internal regimes and external relations have characteristic patterns and vulnerabilities both individually and as a group. The purpose of this volume is to assess both what has been accomplished and the trends of development in the region, especially its leading states. How sound are the foundations of this "bulwark against the spread of terrorism" in Eurasia?

    List of Tables; Preface; Acknowledgments; Map; Part I: Overview; 1. Central Asia: At the End of the Transition, Boris Rumer; Part II: The External Context; 2. Russia and Central Asia: Problems of Security, Irina Zviagel'skaia; 3. Russia: On the Path to Empire? Konstantin Syroezhkin; 4. China's Central Asia Policy: Making Sense of the Shanghai Cooperation Organization, Richard W. Hu; 5. Islamic Radicalism in Central Asia: The Influence of Pakistan and Afghanistan, Vyacheslav Belokrenitsky; Part III: The Internal Social and Political Context; 6. The Regime in Kazakhstan, Dmitrii Furman; 7. Uzbekistan: Between Traditionalism and Westernization, Evgeniy Abdullaev; Part IV: The Prospects for Economic Development; 8. Kyrgyzstan and Uzbekistan: Landlocked Agrarian Economies with an Unlimited Supply of Labor, Stanislav Zhukov; 9. Institutional Barriers to the Economic Development of Uzbekistan, Eshref Trushin and Eskender Trushin; 10. Kazakhstan: The Development of Small Raw-Material Exporters Under the Constraints of Globalization, Stanislav Zhukov; 11. Economic Ties Between Russia and Kazakhstan: Dynamics, Tendencies, and Prospects, Stanislav Zhukov and Oksana Reznikova; Index; About the Editor and Contributors.

    Biography

    Boris Rumer