1st Edition
The Politics of Transition in Central Asia and the Caucasus Enduring Legacies and Emerging Challenges
Section I: Frameworks for Analysis 1. Tempting Two Fates: The Theoretical Foundations for Understanding Central Eurasian Transitions - Christoph H. Stefes and Amanda E. Wooden 2. Revealing Order in the Chaos: Field Experiences and Methodologies of Political and Social Research on Central Eurasia - Amanda E. Wooden, Medina Aitieva and Tim Epkenhans Section II: Political Contexts of Transitional Variations 3. Expecting Ethnic Conflict: The Soviet Legacy and Ethnic Politics in the Caucasus and Central Asia - Julie A. George 4. State Power and Autocratic Stability: Armenia and Georgia Compared - Lucan Way 5. Central Asian Protest Movements: Social Forces or State Resources? - Eric McGlinchey Section III: Policymaking Legacies and Futures 6. Following Through on Reforms: Comparing Market Liberalization in Kazakhstan and Uzbekistan - Pamela Blackmon 7. Caspian Energy Wealth: Social Impacts and Implications for Regional Stability - Oksan Bayulgen 8. Beyond Treaty Signing: Internalizing Human Rights in Central Eurasia - Christopher P.M. Waters 9. Internalization of Universal Norms: A Study of Gender Equality in Kyrgyzstan and Turkmenistan - Irina Liczek and Jens Wandel 10. Education in Central Asia: Transitional Challenges and Impacts - Carolyn Kissane 11. Multivaried and Interacting Paths of Change in Central Eurasia - Amanda E. Wooden and Christoph H. Stefes.
Biography
Amanda E. Wooden is Assistant Professor of Environmental Politics & Policy at Bucknell University. Her research specializations are environmental security, environmental and energy policymaking, and water politics in Central Eurasia. In 2006-07, she served as Economic and Environmental Field Officer in Osh, Kyrgyzstan for the OSCE. Christoph H. Stefes is Associate Professor of Comparative European & Post-Soviet Studies at the University of Colorado, Denver. His research focuses on political and economic developments in the South Caucasus. He is the author of Understanding Post-Soviet Transition: Corruption, Collusion and Clientelism.
This book has a number of strengths. It is a compilation of rich and accurate material on a range of topics for a number of countries in the region. It can be used as a source of information for policy makers, a textbook for graduate level studies, a starting point for research projects, or an enriching read for an accomplished expert. All in all, the book is a broad take on complex, diverse and divergent region. - Yevgenya Jenny Paturyan, an Assistant Director at the Turpanjian Center for Policy Analysis at the American University of Armenia.(2014)






