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Central Eurasia : prize or quicksand? : contending views of instability in Karabakh, Ferghana and Afghanistan / Kenneth Weisbrode.

By: Contributor(s): Material type: TextSeries: Adelphi papers ; no. 338.Publication details: Oxford ; New York : Oxford University Press for the International Institute for Strategic Studies, 2001.Description: 96 pages : maps ; 24 cmContent type:
  • text
Media type:
  • unmediated
Carrier type:
  • volume
ISBN:
  • 0198510705
Other title:
  • Contending views of instability in Karabakh, Ferghana and Afghanistan
Subject(s): Genre/Form: LOC classification:
  • U162 A3 W44 p.338
Online resources:
Contents:
New area on the map -- Karabakh and the South caucasus -- Ferghana and Central Asia -- Afghanistan.
Review: "A decade after the demise of the Soviet Union, the newly independent states to Russia's south remain poor and remote from the developed world. Living standards have fallen throughout the region, while the energy wealth envisioned in the mid-1990s never materialised. Most governments have grown more corrupt and less stable. Responsibility for this state of affairs rests partly on an exaggerated and misplaced view, particularly popular among influential Western analysts, that the region is a natural, or even desirable, setting for imperial conflict. This view has skewed the policies of local actors away from much needed cooperation with one another and with more powerful neighbours. The major powers with interests in Central Eurasia - particularly the US - need to re-examine their fundamental assumptions about the region and what they want from it. Until they do, neither peace nor development will be possible and conditions will only deteriorate."--Jacket.
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Books Ghana Armed Forces Command and Staff College General stacks Reference U162 A3 W44 p.338 (Browse shelf(Opens below)) Available 2024-0724

Includes bibliographical references (pages 87-96).

New area on the map -- Karabakh and the South caucasus -- Ferghana and Central Asia -- Afghanistan.

"A decade after the demise of the Soviet Union, the newly independent states to Russia's south remain poor and remote from the developed world. Living standards have fallen throughout the region, while the energy wealth envisioned in the mid-1990s never materialised. Most governments have grown more corrupt and less stable. Responsibility for this state of affairs rests partly on an exaggerated and misplaced view, particularly popular among influential Western analysts, that the region is a natural, or even desirable, setting for imperial conflict. This view has skewed the policies of local actors away from much needed cooperation with one another and with more powerful neighbours. The major powers with interests in Central Eurasia - particularly the US - need to re-examine their fundamental assumptions about the region and what they want from it. Until they do, neither peace nor development will be possible and conditions will only deteriorate."--Jacket.

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