Transformation of Tajikistan

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Amir Temur
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Central Asia
Central Asian politics
civil conflict studies
Counter-narcotics Assistance
Counter-narcotics Policies
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Fergana Valleys
Gender
gender relations Central Asia
Global Financial Standards
Globalization
Hagiographic Process
ICG Report
Islam
Islamic secularism
narcotics policy analysis
nation-building in Tajikistan
Political Criminal Nexus
Post-conflict Tajikistan
post-Soviet transformation
Present Day Tajikistan
President Rahmon
Rahmon Regime
Religious Field
Samanid State
Soviet Union
Statehood
Tajik Afghan Border
Tajik Autonomous Soviet Socialist Republic
Tajik Government
Tajik Identity
Tajik People
Tajik Soviet Socialist Republic
Tajik SSR
Tajik State
Tajikistan
Uzbek SSR
Vice Versa
Young Man

Product details

  • ISBN 9780415500159
  • Weight: 570g
  • Dimensions: 174 x 246mm
  • Publication Date: 01 Oct 2012
  • Publisher: Taylor & Francis Ltd
  • Publication City/Country: GB
  • Product Form: Hardback
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Tajikistan is one of the lesser-known and least-researched former Soviet Central Asian republics. The birth of the new state in 1991 was followed closely by a civil war which killed more than 50,000 people and displaced many tens of thousands more. While a peace agreement was signed in 1997, significant political violence continued until 2001 and intermittent outbreaks still occur today. Many claim it remains a very weak state and perhaps in danger of state failure or a return to civil war. However, the revival of Tajikistan should not simply be seen in terms of its post-conflict stabilization. Since its creation as a republic of the Soviet Union in 1920s, Tajikistan has been transformed from being a shell for socialist engineering to become a national society under a modern state. Despite a multitude of economic, social and political shocks, the Republic of Tajikistan endures.

This book places the transformation of Tajikistan in its Soviet and Post-Soviet historical settings and local and global contexts. It explores the sources of a state with Soviet roots but which has been radically transformed by independence and its exposure to global politics and economics. The authors address the sources of statehood in history, Islam and secularism, gender relations, the economy, international politics and security affairs.

This book is a new edition of a special issue of Central Asian Survey, ‘Tajikistan: the sources of statehood’, including two additional papers and a revised introduction.

John Heathershaw is Lecturer in International Relations at the University of Exeter.  He is the author of Post-Conflict Tajikistan: The Politics of Peacebuilding and the Emergence of Legitimate Order. Edmund Herzig is Soudavar Professor of Persian Studies and Fellow of Wadham College, University of Oxford.