Ethnic Conflict in the Post-Soviet World: Case Studies and AnalysisL. M. Drobizheva M.E. Sharpe, 1996 - 365 pages Presents 16 case studies of ethnic conflict in the post-Soviet world. The book places ethnic conflict in the context of imperial collapse, democratization and state building. |
Contents
INTRODUCTION | 3 |
THE BALKANS | 15 |
Minority Rights and Majority Rule | 37 |
CENTRAL EUROPE | 63 |
THE BALTIC | 87 |
Ukraine After Empire | 109 |
Russian Ethnonationalism | 129 |
Democratization and Ethnic Conflict in PostSoviet Society | 149 |
THE CAUCASUS | 203 |
The Former ChechenoIngushetia | 209 |
Ethnic Conflict in NagornoKarabagh | 227 |
Ethnic Conflict in Tajikistan | 255 |
Ethnicity and Regionalism in Uzbekistan | 271 |
MINORITIES REFUGEES AND MIGRANTS | 303 |
Interethnic Tensions and Demographic Movement | 327 |
CONCLUSION | 337 |
Ethnicity or Nationalism? | 157 |
On the Problem of Interethnic Conflict | 179 |
THE VOLGA REGION | 195 |
Other editions - View all
Ethnic Conflict in the Post-Soviet World: Case Studies and Analysis L. M. Drobizheva Limited preview - 1998 |
Common terms and phrases
areas Armenian autonomy Azerbaijan Azeri Baku Baltic Birlik Bosnia-Herzegovina Bosnian Bulgaria census Central Asia Checheno-Ingushetia Chechens Chechnya citizens communist constitution Crimean Croatia Croats CSCE cultural Czech Czechoslovakia declared democratic dominant East European Eastern Europe economic elections elites Estonian ethnic conflict ethnic groups ethnic Romanians ethnic Russians ethnic tolerance ethnically based forces former Soviet Gypsies Hungarian identity ideology increased independence indigenous Ingush Ingushetia interethnic Islamic issues June Karabagh Khojent language leaders majority Meskheti minority Moscow movement Muslim Nagorno-Karabagh nationalist NKAR organizations Ossetians parliament parties percent period policies political Popular Front President problems referendum refugees region relations Report republic republic's result RFE/RL role Roma Romani Russian Federation Sakha Sakha Republic Samarkand Serbs Slovak Slovakia social society sovereignty Soviet Union Supreme Soviet Tajik Tajikistan Tashkent Tatar Tatarstan territory threat tion Tuva Tuva's Tuvinian Ukraine Ukrainian USSR Uzbek Uzbekistan violence Yakutsk Yeltsin Yugoslavia