1st Edition
Many Faces of the Caucasus
1. Many Faces of the Caucasus 2. The Origins and Trajectory of the Caucasian Conflicts 3. Securing the South Caucasus: Military Aspects of Russian Policy towards the Region since 2008 4. Young Soldiers’ Tales of War in Nagorno-Karabakh 5. Co-optation or Empowerment? The Fate of Pro-Democracy NGOs after the Rose Revolution 6. A Broken Region: The Persistent Failure of Integration Projects in the South Caucasus 7. Re-thinking Citizenship in the South Caucasus 8. Re-making a Frontier Community or Defending Ethnic Boundaries? The Caucasus in Cossack Identity 9. Post-Soviet Ethnic Relations in Stavropol’skii Krai, Russia: ‘A Melting Pot or Boiling Shaft’? 10. Suicide Bombing: Chechnya, the North Caucasus and Martyrdom
Biography
Nino Kemoklidze is a PhD candidate at the University of Birmingham. Her dissertation topic concerns problems of nationalism and ethnic violence in Georgia. She was a visiting PhD researcher at Uppsala Center for Russian and Eurasian Studies (UCRS), Sweden in 2013 and a guest researcher at the Department of Russian and Eurasian Studies, Norwegian Institute of Foreign Affairs (NUPI) in 2010–2011.
Cerwyn Moore is a Senior Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Birmingham. He works on interpretive IR theory and conflict in the Caucasus and Central Asia. He has published widely on aspects of the conflicts in the North Caucasus in a host of peer reviewed journals and in a monograph, Contemporary Violence: Postmodern War in Kosovo and Chechnya (Manchester: MUP, 2010).
Jeremy Smith is Professor of Russian History and Politics at the Karelian Institute, University of Eastern Finland. He has recently completed projects on the Khrushchev era and on Georgian nationalism and Soviet power in the 1950s. His research focuses on the non-Russian nationalities of the Soviet Union, with especial emphasis on the South Caucasus region, and he is also part of a team providing commentary and insight into contemporary relations between Europe and Central Asian countries in the ‘EU-Central Asia Monitoring’ project.
Galina Yemelianova is a Senior Lecturer in Eurasian Studies at the University of Birmingham. She heads the University of Birmingham Research Group on the Caucasus and Central Asia and teaches an MSc Pathway on the Caucasus and Central Asia. She has been researching history and contemporary politics in the Middle East and Muslim Eurasia for more than two decades.






