1. Introduction: Critical approaches to security in Central Asia Part I: State Security Discourses and the Geopolitics of Authoritarianism 2. Framing Andijon, narrating the nation: Islam Karimov’s account of the events of 13 May 2005 3. Disorder over the border: spinning the spectre of instability through time and space in Central Asia 4. Islamic discourses in Azerbaijan: the securitization of ‘non-traditional religious movements’ 5. The terrorist attacks in the Volga region, 2012–13: hegemonic narratives and everyday understandings of (in)security Part II: The Discourses of Danger and Conflict Management in Central Asia 6. Locating danger: Konfliktologiia and the search for fixity in the Ferghana valley borderlands 7. The paradox of peacebuilding: peril, promise, and small arms in Tajikistan 8. ‘A wash with weapons’?: the case of small arms in Kyrgyzstan 9. In search of harmony: repairing infrastructure and social relations in the Ferghana valley Part III: Everyday (In)security: Harmony, Accommodation and Resistance 10. Living dangerously: securityscapes of Lyuli and LGBT people in urban spaces of Kyrgyzstan 11. Security matters in marriage: Uyghurs’ perceptions of security in Xinjiang, China 12. Navigating the safety implications of doing research and being researched in Kyrgyzstan: cooperation, networks and framing 13. Kyrgyzstan’s informal settlements: yntymak and the emergence of politics in place 14. ‘The state starts from the family’: peace and harmony in Tajikistan's eastern Pamirs 15. Counter-extremism, power and authoritarian governance in Tajikistan
Biography
Edward Lemon is Kennan Institute Fellow at the Daniel Morgan Graduate School, Washington DC, USA. He has previously held positions at Columbia University, USA, and the University of Exeter, UK. His research examines authoritarian governance, religion, security, and migration in Eurasia.






